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New
Isotope Molecule May Add To Venus’ Greenhouse Effect
Wednesday, October 10, 2007
This
is an artist's impression of Venus Express orbiting Venus.
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Credits:
ESA
Planetary scientists on
both sides of the Atlantic have tracked down a rare molecule in
the atmospheres of both Mars and Venus. The molecule, an exotic
form of carbon dioxide, could affect the way the greenhouse
mechanism works on Venus.
The discovery is being announced
today at the annual meeting of the American Astronomical
Society’s Division of Planetary Sciences in Orlando,
Florida. Its presence could affect the way the greenhouse
mechanism works on Venus.
The mystery began back in April
2006, soon after ESA’s Venus Express arrived at the second
planet in the Solar System.
A European team including
members from France, Belgium and Russia lead by Jean-Loup
Bertaux, Service d'Aeronomie du CNRS, France and Ann-Carine
Vandaele, Institut d'Aeronomie Spatiale de Belgique, were using
their Infrared Atmospheric Spectrometer (SOIR) instrument to
measure solar occultations.
To do this, the instrument
watches the Sun set behind Venus, allowing the scientists to
study the way specific wavelengths of light are absorbed by the
planet’s atmosphere. These wavelengths and the level of
absorption then give away the identity and amount of gases in the
atmosphere.
The team saw an unidentified
signature at 3.3 micrometers in the mid-infrared region of the
spectrum. “It was conspicuous and systematic, increasing
with depth in the atmosphere during the occultation, so we knew
it was real,” says Bertaux.
The team kept their discovery
confidential as they attempted to identify the molecule
responsible. They thought at first that it must be an organic
molecule. These molecules contain carbon and hydrogen. However,
none of the known organic molecules fitted well with the
observations.
Then, in December 2006, Mike
Mumma of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Maryland,
inquired whether the SOIR team was seeing anything special on
Venus at 3.3 microns. He had discovered an unidentified spectral
signature at that wavelength using telescopes on Hawaii pointing
at Mars. The two teams compared the absorption signatures: they
were identical.
This was a big clue. Both the
atmospheres of Mars and Venus are composed of 95% carbon dioxide,
although Venuses atmosphere is much thicker than the one at Mars.
The American team suggested that the signature could be coming
from an isotope of carbon dioxide, where one oxygen atom is
‘normal’, with eight protons and eight neutrons,
while the other has eight protons and ten neutrons. Such an
isotope makes up about 1% of carbon dioxide on Earth, the rest
contains two normal oxygen atoms.
However, no one had previously
seen the molecule absorb at 3.3 micrometers. An investigation by
three independent groups, one led by Mumma in America, Sergei
Tashkun and Valery Perevalov at Tomsk State University, Russia,
and Richard Dahoo at Service d'Aéronomie du CNRS, France,
all came to the same conclusion. The signature could be caused by
a rare transition only possible in the isotope.
The different weights of the
oxygen atoms allow the molecule to alter its vibration in two
ways simultaneously, whereas normal molecules can only change one
state at a time.
This rare transition allows it
to absorb even more energy and so contribute even more to the
greenhouse effect on Venus. On Earth, however, there is 250 000
times less carbon dioxide so its additional contribution to our
greenhouse effect will be small.
Source:
ESA

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