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Venus
Express reboots the search for active volcanoes on Venus
Friday, April 4, 2008
This
is an animation of Venus Express performing stellar
occultation at Venus.
Venus
Express is the first mission ever to apply the technique of
stellar occultation at Venus. The technique consists of
looking at the Sun through the atmospheric limb. By
analyzing the way the sunlight is absorbed by the
atmosphere, one can deduce the characteristics of the
atmosphere itself.
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Credits:
ESA (Animation by AOES Medialab)
ESA’s Venus Express has
measured a highly variable quantity of the volcanic gas sulfur
dioxide in the atmosphere of Venus. Scientists must now decide
whether this is evidence for active volcanoes on Venus, or linked
to a hitherto unknown mechanism affecting the upper
atmosphere.
The search for volcanoes is a long-running
thread in the exploration of Venus. “Volcanoes are a key
part of a climate system,” says Fred Taylor, a Venus
Express Interdisciplinary Scientist from Oxford University.
That’s because they release gases such as sulfur dioxide
into the planet’s atmosphere.
On Earth, sulfur
compounds do not stay in the atmosphere for long. Instead, they
react with the surface of the planet. The same is thought to be
true at Venus, although the reactions are much slower, with a
time scale of 20 million years.
Some scientists have
argued that the large proportion of sulfur dioxide found by
previous space missions at Venus is the ‘smoking gun’
of recent volcanic eruptions. However, others maintain that the
eruptions could have happened around 10 million years ago and
that the sulfur dioxide remains in the atmosphere because it
takes such a long time to react with the surface rocks.
New
observations from Venus Express showing rapid variations of
sulfur dioxide in the upper atmosphere have revived this debate.
The SPICAV (Spectroscopy for Investigation of
Characteristics of the Atmosphere of Venus) instrument analyses
the way starlight or sunlight is absorbed by Venus' atmosphere.
The absorbed light tells scientists the identity of the atoms and
molecules found in the planet’s atmosphere. This technique
works only in the more tenuous upper atmosphere, above the clouds
at an altitude of 70–90 km. In the space of a few days, the
quantity of sulfur dioxide in the upper atmosphere dropped by
two-thirds.
Jean-Loup Bertaux, Service d’Aeronomie
du CNRS, Verrières-le-Buisson, is the Principal
Investigator for SPICAV. “I am very skeptical about the
volcanic hypothesis,” he says. “However, I must admit
that we don’t understand yet why there is so much SO2 at
high altitudes, where it should be destroyed rapidly by solar
light, and why it is varying so wildly.”
Another
instrument on Venus Express, VIRTIS (Visible and Infrared Thermal
Imaging Spectrometer), can see below the clouds at infrared
wavelengths. It detects the signature of sulfur dioxide by the
amount of infrared radiation that the molecule absorbs, the
stronger the signature, the more abundant the molecule.
The variation appears to be
smaller in the lower atmosphere. ”With VIRTIS, we monitor
sulfur dioxide at an altitude of 35–40 km, and we have seen
no change larger than 40% on a global scale over the last two
years,” says Giuseppe Piccioni, VIRTIS co-Principal
Investigator, IASF-INAF in Rome.
The only way to be
absolutely certain that active volcanism is taking place on Venus
is to see a volcano in action. This is not easy when you are
trying to look through 100 km of thick, cloudy atmosphere. But
the Venus Express team are working on two ways of doing this. The
first is to look for localized increases in sulfur dioxide that
would indicate a large plume of the gas issuing from a volcano.
The other way is to look for hot spots on the surface that can be
shown to be fresh lava flows.
In both cases, the
instrument to use is VIRTIS. “No thermal anomaly has been
detected so far,” says Pierre Drossart, Observatoire de
Paris, France, and co-Principal Investigator on VIRTIS.
Nevertheless, the search continues and the team plan to announce
their findings soon.
Source:
ESA

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