Abstract

We present a model for the general circulation and dynamical transport in Saturn’s upper troposphere and stratosphere and derive the effective advective circulation and eddy transport coefficients required for use in two-dimensional (latitude–altitude) photochemistry–transport models. A three-dimensional Outer-Planet General Circulation Model (OPGCM) is used to generate the transport data. We find that the OPGCM adequately captures the global-scale, pole-to pole temperature contrast, but overestimates mid- and high-latitude temperatures in the summer hemisphere by ∼5K. In addition, the model reproduces the local temperature minimum seen at the equator in Cassini Composite Infrared Spectrometer (CIRS) 0.1-mbar data but not the local maximum in 1-mbar temperatures, suggesting that it is capturing the phase of Saturn’s Semiannual Oscillation associated with a temperature minimum at the equator but not the opposite phase. The meridional circulation at low latitudes is found to be dominated by a seasonally reversing Hadley circulation, characterized by upwelling near the equator, cross-equatorial flow from summer to winter hemisphere, and strong subsidence centered near 25° latitude in the winter hemisphere. The cross-equatorial flow induces an asymmetry in which the equatorial jet is found to be stronger in the winter than in the summer stratosphere. The location of the subsidence near 25°N for Ls∼310° coincides with local maxima in acetylene, diacetylene, and methylacetylene mixing ratios measured by Cassini/CIRS (Guerlet, S., Fouchet, T., Bézard, B., Moses, J.I., Fletcher, L.N., Simon-Miller, A.A., Flasar, F.M. [2010]. Icarus 209, 682–695). This result supports the suggestion by Guerlet et al. (2010) that the hydrocarbon abundances are enhanced at this latitude by pronounced downward transport of hydrocarbon-rich air from above. The lateral eddy diffusion coefficient is found to typically be ∼105–106m2s−1 at mid-latitudes, implying meridional eddy transport time scales of order 100–1000years.

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