Voyager Infrared Spectrometer (IRIS)
Overview
Voyager’s Infrared Spectrometer (IRIS) acts as three separate instruments. First, it is a very sophisticated thermometer. It can determine the distribution of heat energy a body is emitting, allowing scientists to determine the temperature of that body or substance. Second, the IRIS is a device that can determine when certain types of elements or compounds are present in an atmosphere or on a surface. Third, it uses a separate radiometer to measure the total amount of sunlight reflected by a body at ultraviolet, visible, and infrared frequencies.
The Voyager IRIS instrument obtained one thermal spectrum every 48 seconds (or “FDS count”) throughout each planetary flyby. The instrument was devoted primarily to atmospheric observations, but it did acquire numerous thermal spectra of Saturn’s ring system.
The IRIS Tabs
The tabs associated with this page describe the IRIS data files and how to obtain them.
- Instrument - Descriptive information about the instrument.
- Original Volume - Information about the IRIS data set as originally published by the PDS Atmospheres Node.
- Expanded Volumes - Information about an expanded version of the Jupiter and Saturn data sets, as published by the Ring-Moon Systems Node.