During the spectacular weeklong collision, a string of 21 comet fragments pounded into the southern hemisphere of Jupiter, leaving dark scars in the planet’s atmosphere that persisted for several weeks.
The remarkable event was the first direct observation of an extraterrestrial collision in the solar system. Amateur and professional astronomers followed it with many ground-based telescopes and the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope.
ESA’s Infrared Space Observatory was launched in 1995 and was the first to detect and study water in Jupiter’s upper atmosphere. Scientists widely speculated that Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 may have been the origin of this water, but direct proof was missing.
Astronomers were able to exclude an internal source, such as water rising from deeper within the planet’s atmosphere, because it is not possible for water vapor to pass through the “cold trap” that separates the stratosphere from the visible cloud deck in the troposphere below.
Thus the water in Jupiter’s stratosphere must have been delivered from outside. But determining its origin had to wait more than 15 years, until Herschel used its sensitive infrared eyes to map the vertical and horizontal distribution of water’s chemical signature.
Herschel’s observations found that there was 2–3 times more water in the southern hemisphere of Jupiter than in the northern hemisphere, with most of it concentrated around the sites of the 1994 comet impact. Additionally, it is only found at high altitudes.
“Only Herschel was able to provide the sensitive spectral imaging needed to find the missing link between Jupiter’s water and the 1994 impact of comet Shoemaker-Levy 9,” said Thibault Cavalié of the Laboratory of Astrophysics of Bordeaux. “According to our models, as much as 95 percent of the water in the stratosphere is due to the comet impact.”
Another possible source of water would be a steady rain of small interplanetary dust particles onto Jupiter. But, in this case, the water should be uniformly distributed across the whole planet and should have filtered down to lower altitudes.
Also, one of Jupiter’s icy moons could deliver water to the planet via a giant vapor torus, as Herschel has seen from Saturn’s moon Enceladus, but this too has been ruled out. None of Jupiter’s large moons is in the right place to deliver water to the locations observed.
Finally, the scientists were able to rule out any significant contributions from recent small impacts spotted by amateur astronomers in 2009 and 2010, along with local variations in the temperature of Jupiter’s atmosphere.
Shoemaker-Levy 9 is the only likely culprit.
“All four giant planets in the outer solar system have water in their atmospheres, but there may be four different scenarios for how they got it,” said Cavalié. “For Jupiter, it is clear that Shoemaker-Levy 9 is by far the dominant source, even if other external sources may contribute also.”
“Thanks to Herschel’s observations, we have now linked a unique comet impact — one that was followed in real time and which captured the public’s imagination — to Jupiter’s water, finally solving a mystery that has been open for nearly two decades,” said Göran Pilbratt from ESA.
The observations made in this study foreshadow those planned for ESA’s future Jupiter Icy moons Explorer mission launching toward the jovian system in 2022, where it will map the distribution of Jupiter’s atmospheric ingredients in even greater detail.