Results of the visible and infrared imaging spectrometer VIRTIS Two series of investigations have been conducted in this first step with VIRTIS, built partly in LESIA in collaboration with the Istituto di Astrofisica Spaziale in Rome: a) The high atmospheric emission come from two molecules : CO2 , for fluorescent observations inthe vibration band at 4.3 micron, on the day side, and O2 in the radiative recombination band from 1Deltag state at 1.27 micron on the night side. In both cases, limb observations give a direct and essential viewing point for the modelization : the peak altitude of the emission are measured at 115 km for CO2 and 96 km for O2. These altitudes correspond to upper atmospheric sones where complex energy transfer between solar radiation, gravity wave dissipation coming from lower altitude regions and solar wind interaction take place. These altitudes are also very poorly know, due to the difficulty to directly observe them. The VIRTIS observations therefore pave the way to systematic observations of spatio-temporal variability in the upper atmospheric layers. A first step has been obtained in confronting models to observations, in order to use these emissions as diagnostics of intrincsic atmospheric phenomena.
b) The night side observations of Venus in infrared windows between 1 and 5 microns give a direct sounding of the atmosphere at different levels. The situation of Venus Express, with an apocenter at 65,000 km above the South pole give a global view on the complex dynamical phenomena of this area. A polar vortex is present on Venus, as on other planetary atmospheres. It constitutes an essential feature of the global dynamics of Venus : a superrotation at the equator is associated to a Hadley cell circulation between pole and equator. The polar vortex is part of this global system of circulation, for which only the first details are interpreted so far. The rotation of the vortex is measured by VIRTIS at 2.48 +/- 0.05 days (retrograde), slower then than equatorial rotation
VIRTIS was jointly developed by LESIA (UMR 8109), Paris Observatory and the Istituto di Astrofisica Spaziale in Rome (P. Drossart et G. Piccioni pricnipal investigators), with support of CNES and ASI ; many French and European institutes collaborate in this experiment. See also: Site ESA | Site VIRTIS Ã l’Observatoire
References P. Drossart, G. Piccioni et al., A dynamic upper atmosphere of Venus as revealed by VIRTIS on Venus Express Nature, 29 novembre 2007 G. Piccioni, P. Drossart et al.,South-polar features on Venus similar to those near the north pole ; Nature 29 novembre 2007 J.-C. Gérard, A. Saglam, G. Piccioni, P. Drossart, C. Cox, S. Erard, R. Hueso and A. Sánchez-Lavega The distribution of the O2 infrared nightglow observed with VIRTIS on board Venus Express, Geophys. Res. Lett., sous presse.
Contact
- Pierre Drossart
Observatoire de Paris, LESIA, et CNRS
Last update on 21 December 2021