NMSUAstronomy

Skip to: [content ] [navigation] [Surfing with an old web browser? Please switch over to our classic web pages.]

Tanya Tavenner

Teaching Assistant
Entered: 2002
Office: 109 Astronomy
Phone: (575)646-3409
Fax: (575)646-1602
 
E-mail: tanya
(append "@nmsu.edu")
 
Photo
M.S.New Mexico State University,2006
B.S. University of Washington, 2001

Research

I have worked with Dr. Nancy Chanover and Dr. Jim Murphy to study zonal wind speeds in giant planet atmospheres. We have imaged Jupiter and Saturn with the AO-Vis camera on the AEOS 3.63-meter telescope on Haleakala. The data were taken with tip/tilt correction, enhancing the spatial resolution, and using a pair of filters designed to probe different altitudes. One filter is centered on a methane absorption band at 727 nm, while the other is centered on a nearby continuum region at 751 nm.

In the absence of clouds, the filters would span an order of magnitude in pressure sensitivity. With the presence of the uppermost cloud deck, assumed to be composed of ammonia based on chemical equilibrium arguments, the two filters effectively sound to the center and upper boundary of the tropospheric cloud deck. Such a pair of filters provides vertical discrimination, allowing for the search for variations in the cloud levels and the horizontal (zonal) winds with height.

We have determined wind speeds for several different latitudes and known cloud features on Jupiter and Saturn. While Jupiter's zonal wind jets are thought to be relatively stable, recent reports of a decrease in Saturn's zonal winds at cloud level near the equator suggest that differences between the two planets exist. The stability of the zonal wind jets has important implications for the modeling of global circulation and energy balance in the giant planet atmospheres.

In related project, we have observed the nightside of Venus at 2.3 microns using both IRTF on Mauna Kea and APO in New Mexico during the past two inferior conjuctions. Using IRTF we observed over a ten day span for 3-hours each day, which is sufficient to determine the major cloud motions. More recently, by using both APO and IRTF we achieved a 5-hour temporal baseline each day over six days of observation. We see the lower cloud deck of Venus (48 - 52 km) backlit by 2.3 micron thermal radiation emanating from the surface and the lower atmosphere. These observations have allowed us to derive cloud-level wind speeds, and identify transient features in the observed Venusian wind field.

Our observations typically consist of many (a few thousand) short exposures of Venus during each twilight opportunity. These sequences lend themselves to image restoration processing by iterative blind deconvolution. We present restorations implemented using "IDAC" (Jefferies and Christou, ApJ, 415, 1993), a code that is distributed through the Center for Adaptive Optics at UC Santa Cruz. The use of IDAC has significantly increased the resolution of our ground based observations of Venus. This increases the accuracy of our wind speed measurements to the point were we can look for meridional motion.

We have adapted feature-tracking algorithms from several terrestrial remote sensing applications in order to track cloud movement. We are beginning to model wind vector fields based on these algorithms, and to evaluate their potential advantages and shortfalls.

Meetings

I presented a poster on A Sharper View of Venus: Strategies For Precise Cloud Tracking of Venus' Lower Cloud Deck at the October 2006 Division of Planetary Sciences meeting in Pasadena.

I presented a poster on Vertical Discrimination in the Zonal Wind Speeds of Jupiter and Saturn at the November 2004 Division of Planetary Sciences meeting in Louisville.