Title: Solarsystem observations with HerschelALMA
1Solar-system observations with Herschel/ALMA
- T. Encrenaz, D. Bockelée-Morvan,
- J. Crovisier, E. Lellouch
- LESIA, Observatoire de Paris
2Outline
- Why the far-IR/submm/mm range?
- Major objectives of solar-system research
- Venus, Mars and the giant planets
- Satellites, distant asteroids and TNOs
- Comets
3Why the far-IR/submm/mm range?
- Solar-system objects are COLD objects which
radiate at low frequencies - Strong molecular rotational transitions
- Ideal for
- planetary atmospheres
- cometary atmospheres
- distant objects (TNOs)
4Many major discoveries in planetary and cometary
science
- First detection of HCN in Comet Halley (1986)
- Over 20 parent molecules detected in Hale-Bopp
(1997) - First detection of a stable atmosphere (SO2)
around Io (1990) also SO and NaCl(2002) - Detection of new molecules in Jupiter after the
SL9 collision (1994)CO, CS, OCS, HCN - First detection of H2O2 on Mars (2004)
5Major issues in solar-system sciences
- Origin of the solar system
- Giant planets composition D/H, He/H, oxygen
source - Comets composition and link with ISM minor
constituents, D/H in various species - TNOs Ts/albedo
- Evolution of solar-system objects
- Minor constituents and dynamics of planetary and
satellite atmospheres - Comets activity, physico-chemistry and
thermodynamics
6Venus
- CO, H2O/HDO observed in the mm range -gt vertical
distributions wind measurements - No observation with ISO nor Herschel
- Perspective with ALMA
- velocity field from CO, H2O, H218O maps (-gt D/H)
- dynamics of the mesosphere (z 100 km)
- zonal super-rotation, global circulation
- Search for minor mesospheric species (HCl, H2S,
SO2) - Follow-up of Venus Express
7Mars a prime objective of planetary exploration
- Questions
- Past and present climate
- Water cycle
- Evidence for liquid water in the past?
- Evidence for traces of fossil life?
- An extensive space exploration with orbiters and
landers ( Follow the water )
8MarsHigh-resolution spectroscopy
- CO, H2O/HDO/H218O observed in the mm range -gt
vertical distributions - ISO, Odin, SWAS -gt water distribution
- Perspectives with Herschel and ALMA
- H2O, CO and isotopes (in part. D/H)
- Minor species H2O2, O2, O3
- Search for undetected species HCl, NH3, HO2,
H2CO, SO2, H2S, OCS
9MARS OBSERVATIONS WITH ODIN
Biver et al., 2004
10Ozone on Mars with Herschel
11NH3 on Mars with Herschel and ALMA (Q 5 10-10)
Herschel
ALMA
12Mars A 3-D dynamical picture of the middle
atmosphere(winds, T(P) and water mapping)
- First maps using CO(2-1) at IRAM (30m PdB)
- Comparison with GCM good overall agreement but
strong retrograde winds observed whatever the
season - -gt future observations important for better
understanding the martian climate - -gt Major objective for ALMA
- Complementarity with space missions
(Mars Express and future orbiters )
13Mars velocity field, IRAM PdB (Moreno, 2001)
z 50 -70 km
Perspectives with ALMA DV 3-5 m/s, spatial
resolution on Mars about 100 km
14Giant planets formation
- D/H a tracer of giant planets formation
- In Jupiter and Saturn (mostly made of protosolar
gas) reflects the protosolar value - In Uranus and Neptune ( mostly made of an icy
core) enriched vs protosolar value - Expected
- (D/H)PS(D/H)J lt(D/H)Slt(D/H)U,Nlt(D/H)C
- Confirmed by ISO Galileo measurements
15HD ISO/SWS Feuchtgruber et al., 1999 Lellouch et
al., 2001
Deuterium in the Solar System
16What to do with Herschel?
- New measurement of HD at 56 and 112 mm on the
four giant planets with PACS - Questions
- Is (D/H)S gt (D/H)J ?
- Are (D/H) in protoneptunian ices different from
cometary values? - Is D/H in Oort-cloud comets the same as in
Kuiper-Belt comets?
17Giant planets evolution
- He/H a tracer of giant planets evolution
- In Jupiter and (even more) in Saturn He is
expected to be depleted vs the protosolar value
due to condensation in liquid hydrogen during the
cooling phase - In Uranus and Neptune
- no liquid hydrogen expected
- but H partly linked in ices
- -gt He/H might be enriched in the gas phase
- Present determination are still uncertain (except
Jupiter) - Future Cassini CIRS (Saturn), Herschel/PACS
(Uranus,Neptune), from the far-IR continuum
18He/H in the giant planets
Jupiter Galileo mass spectrometer Saturn,
Uranus, Neptune Voyager (IRIS)
19The oxygen source in the giant planets and Titan
- H2O and CO2 emissions detected by ISO-SWS
SWAS/ODIN (Jupiter, Saturn) - Comparable H2O input fluxes 105-107 cm-2 s-1
- Possible sources
- interplanetary flux (U, N),
- local source (rings, satellites)(S, T?),
- cometary impacts (J?)
- Important implications on
- Dust production and water content at large Rh
(collisions in the Kuiper Belt?) - Rate of cometary impacts
20Observation of the H2O vertical distribution in
Jupiter with SWAS
Bergin et al. 2000
21Oxygen source What to do with Herschel and
ALMA?NB For Saturn complementarity
Herschel/Cassini-CIRS
- Herschel
- H2O abundance and variability
- Possible role of cometary impacts
- H2O vertical distribution (HIFI)
- Constrains on transport models
- Low-resolution mapping of J and S (PACS)
- Possible trapping in aurorae
- ALMA HDO high-resolution mapping
- Determination of D/H in external source?
22Why are Uranus and Neptune so different?
- Strong internal source in Neptune, not in Uranus
- CO and HCN abundant in Neptune s stratosphere
(CON 10-6, COU 3 10-8) - CO mostly internal in Neptune, probably external
in Uranus - Uranus is much more sluggish (eddy diffusion
coefficient 103 times less than in Neptune)
23What to do with Herschel and ALMA?
- Search for tropospheric CO and PH3 (tracer of
vertical motions in Jupiter and Saturn s
tropospheres) - PH3 expected to be abundant in Neptune,
apparently absent in Uranus (convection
inhibited?) - Search for CH4 emission lines
- oversaturation observed in Neptune, not in Uranus
- Search for photochemical products in Neptune
(nitriles)
24Detectability of stratospheric CH4 in Uranus and
Neptune with Herschel/PACS
25Satellites Pluto with ALMA
- Io
- Search for minor species (H2S, S2O, KCl, SiO)
- SO2 low-res. Mapping (-gt volcanism monitoring)
- Titan (complementarity with Cassini/CIRS)
- Mapping of CH3CN, HC3N at z 500 km
-gt dynamics,
photochemistry - HCN winds (low-res.map), D/H
- Triton and Pluto
- Search for CO, HCN
-
26Distant asteroids and TNOs
- Interest of far-IR/submm measurements
determination of diameter Ts (in the visible
aD2 is measured) - Spitzer program (GTO) 114 TNOs, 14 Centaurs
- With Herschel possible to reach D300 km at 40
AU - With ALMA 300 km at 80 UA
27Detectability of TNOs with Herschel/SPIRE
28Observations of comets with Herschel and ALMA (1)
- Water-rich objects -gtStudy with Herschel
- Activity monitoring
- D/H -gt origin
- Tinitial from ortho/para ratio -gt origin
- Tcoma from H2O line intensities -gt thermodynamics
- Doppler shifts -gt velocity fields -gt
thermodynamics, study of jets...
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30Observations of comets with Herschel and ALMA (2)
- Many complex parent molecules -gt study with ALMA
- Search for new species (possible candidates all
ISM molecules!) - Chemical diversity among comets
- Relative abundances -gt link with ISM
- Isotopic ratios (D/H in HCN, HNC, H2CO) -gt
link with ISM - Velocity fields -gt thermodynamics, origin of
outgassing (nucleus, grains), structure (jets)
31The heritage from ISO high-resolution
spectroscopy of rovibrational bands
Crovisier et al., 1997
32The heritage from SWAS the 557 GHz line in
comet C 1999 H I (Lee)
About 12 comets observed with SWAS and/or ODIN
33 The heritage from ground-based
observations Evolution of production rates with
heliocentric distances
Biver et al., 2002
34Parent molecules observed in comets
- In the far-IR/radio range
- H2O, CO, CH3OH, H2CO, HCN, H2S
- NH3, HNCO,CH3CN,HNC, OCS (Hyakutake)
- HCOOH, CH3CHO, HCOOCH3, NH2CHO, HC3N, H2CS, SO,
SO2 (Hale-Bopp) - In the near-IR range
- H2O, CO, CO2, H2CO, OCS, saturated unsaturated
hydrocarbons - CH4, C2H2, C2H6, OCS, NH3 (Hyakutake, Hale-Bopp)
35Water in comets (Herschel)
- H2O in a sample of weak comets (down to Q1026
s-1)-gt prod. rates (HIFI, 557 GHz) - H2O monitoring as a function of Rh (HIFI, 557
GHz) - Search for H2O in distant weakly active objects
(link with asteroids) - Measurement of D/H in H2O
36D/H in comets
- D/H in water a stringent clue to the formation
of comets (T, Rh) - D/H is known for only 3 Oort-cloud comets, not
for Kuiper-belt comets - HDO lines will be searched for with HIFI for
bright comets (Q gt 2 1028 s-1) - D/H in other species (HCN, HNC) will be searched
for with ALMA
37A few good targets for Herschel
- 8P/Tuttle January 2008, QH2O 3. 1028 s-1
D 0.25 AU - 46P/Wirtanen February 2008, QH2O 1. 1028 s-1
- 85P/Boethin December 2008, QH2O 3. 1028 s-1
- 67P/Churyu.-G December 2008, QH2O 5. 1027 s-1
- 22P/Kopff May 2009, QH2O 2.5 1028 s-1
- 81P/Wild 2 February 2010, QH2O 1.3 1028 s-1
- 103P/Hartley 2 October 2010, QH2O 1.2 1028
s-1 D 0.12 AU
possible brighter targets as Targets of
Opportunity
38Mapping cometary atmospheres
CO 230 GHz/Hale-Bopp with IRAM PdB
ALMA Instantaneous 3-D maps of gaseous and dust
(thermal) emissions Coma morphology, spiral
gaseous jets, nucleus outgassing, rotation
properties, dust/gas links Gas temperature and
velocity maps Nucleus thermal emission on long
baselines size, albedo
Henry,2003
39In summary...
- Herschel/ALMA observations of solar-system
objects will be precious in addition to space
missions (MEx, VEx, Rosetta) - D/H in the solar system-gt origins
- Search for minor species in comets-gt link with
the ISM - Observation of many samples (KB comets, TNOs)
- High-resolution mapping of planets and satellites
- A major program with Herschel H2O in the solar
system - Formation of planets and comets
- Activity of outer small bodies and water content
in outer planetesimals