TY - JOUR
T1 - The gravitational signature of internal flows in giant planets
T2 - Comparing the thermal wind approach with barotropic potential-surface methods
AU - Kaspi, Y.
AU - Davighi, J. E.
AU - Galanti, E.
AU - Hubbard, W. B.
N1 - Funding Information:
We acknowledge the Kupcinet-Getz International Science School at the Weizmann Institute of Science (WIS) for providing support for J. Davighi’s work at the WIS during the summer of 2013, which led to the majority of this study. Y.K. and E.G. acknowledge support from the Israeli Ministry of Science (grant 45-851-641), the Minerva foundation with funding from the Federal German Ministry of Education and Research, and from the Helen Kimmel Center for Planetary Science at the WIS. W.B.H. and Y.K. acknowledge support by the Juno project.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 Elsevier Inc.
PY - 2016/9/15
Y1 - 2016/9/15
N2 - The upcoming Juno and Cassini gravity measurements of Jupiter and Saturn, respectively, will allow probing the internal dynamics of these planets through accurate analysis of their gravity spectra. To date, two general approaches have been suggested for relating the flow velocities and gravity fields. In the first, barotropic potential surface models, which naturally take into account the oblateness of the planet, are used to calculate the gravity field. However, barotropicity restricts the flows to be constant along cylinders parallel to the rotation axis. The second approach, calculated in the reference frame of the rotating planet, assumes that due to the large scale and rapid rotation of these planets, the winds are to leading order in geostrophic balance. Therefore, thermal wind balance relates the wind shear to the density gradients. While this approach can take into account any internal flow structure, it is limited to only calculating the dynamical gravity contributions, and has traditionally assumed spherical symmetry. This study comes to relate the two approaches both from a theoretical perspective, showing that they are analytically identical in the barotropic limit, and numerically, through systematically comparing the different model solutions for the gravity harmonics. For the barotropic potential surface models we employ two independent solution methods - the potential-theory and Maclaurin spheroid methods. We find that despite the sphericity assumption, in the barotropic limit the thermal wind solutions match well the barotropic oblate potential-surface solutions.
AB - The upcoming Juno and Cassini gravity measurements of Jupiter and Saturn, respectively, will allow probing the internal dynamics of these planets through accurate analysis of their gravity spectra. To date, two general approaches have been suggested for relating the flow velocities and gravity fields. In the first, barotropic potential surface models, which naturally take into account the oblateness of the planet, are used to calculate the gravity field. However, barotropicity restricts the flows to be constant along cylinders parallel to the rotation axis. The second approach, calculated in the reference frame of the rotating planet, assumes that due to the large scale and rapid rotation of these planets, the winds are to leading order in geostrophic balance. Therefore, thermal wind balance relates the wind shear to the density gradients. While this approach can take into account any internal flow structure, it is limited to only calculating the dynamical gravity contributions, and has traditionally assumed spherical symmetry. This study comes to relate the two approaches both from a theoretical perspective, showing that they are analytically identical in the barotropic limit, and numerically, through systematically comparing the different model solutions for the gravity harmonics. For the barotropic potential surface models we employ two independent solution methods - the potential-theory and Maclaurin spheroid methods. We find that despite the sphericity assumption, in the barotropic limit the thermal wind solutions match well the barotropic oblate potential-surface solutions.
KW - Atmosphere
KW - Atmospheres
KW - Dynamics
KW - Interior
KW - Jupiter
KW - Jupiter
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U2 - 10.1016/j.icarus.2016.04.001
DO - 10.1016/j.icarus.2016.04.001
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84969722204
SN - 0019-1035
VL - 276
SP - 170
EP - 181
JO - Icarus
JF - Icarus
ER -