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How
windy is it on Venus? Venus Express answers
Thursday, September 18, 2008
Credit:
R. Hueso (Universidad del País Vasco)
It is well known that winds
on Venus are extremely fast and powerful. Now, ESA’s Venus
Express has, for the first time, put together a 3-D picture of
the Venusian winds for an entire planetary hemisphere.
The
most powerful atmospheric investigator ever sent to Venus, Venus
Express has an advantageous orbit around the planet and a unique
set of instruments. The spacecraft has the ability to peer
through Venus’s thick atmospheric layers and obtain a truly
global picture.
The spacecraft has continuously monitored
the planet since observations began in 2006, and scientists now
have enough data to start building a complete picture of the
planet’s atmospheric phenomena.
The Venus Express
Visual and Infrared Thermal Imaging Spectrometer, VIRTIS, has
been studying the thick blanket of clouds that surround Venus,
gathering data on the winds. The area studied spans altitudes ofXXXXdonateXXX
45 to 70 km above the surface and covers the entire southern
hemisphere, up to the equator. It is above the southern
hemisphere that Venus Express reaches its highest point in orbit
(about 66 000 km), allowing the instruments to obtain a global
view.
Agustin
Sánchez-Lavega, from the Universidad del País Vasco
in Bilbao, Spain, led the research on 3-D wind mapping with data
from the first year of VIRTIS observations. “We focused on
the clouds and their movement. Tracking them for long periods of
time gives us a precise idea of the speed of the winds that make
the clouds move and of the variation in the winds,” he
said.
Tracking the clouds at different altitudes is
possible only if the instrument is able to look through the
curtain of clouds. “VIRTIS operates at different
wavelengths, each of which penetrates the cloud layer to aXXXXdonateXXX
different altitude,” added Ricardo Hueso, also from the
Universidad del País Vasco, co-author of the results. “We
studied three atmospheric layers and followed the movement of
hundreds of clouds in each. This has never been done before at
such large temporal and spatial scales, and with multi-wavelength
coverage.”
In total, the team tracked 625 clouds at
about 66 km altitude, 662 at around 61 km altitude, and 932 at
about 45-47 km altitude, on the day and night sides of the
planet. The individual cloud layers were imaged over several
months for about 1-2 hours each time.
“We have
learnt that between the equator and 50-55˚ latitude south,
the speed of the winds varies a lot, from about 370 km/h at a
height of 66 km down to about 210 km/h at 45-47 km”, said
Sánchez-Lavega.
“At latitudes higher than
65˚, the situation changes dramatically - the huge
hurricane-like vortex structure present over the poles takes
over. All cloud levels are pushed on average by winds of the same
speed, independently of the height, and their speed drops to
almost zero at the center of the vortex.”
Sánchez-Lavega
and colleagues observed that the speed of the zonal winds (which
blow parallel to the lines of latitude) strongly depend on the
local time. The difference in the Sun's heat reaching Venus in
the mornings and in the evenings - called the solar tide effect -
influences the atmospheric dynamics greatly, making winds blow
more strongly in the evenings.
On average, the winds
regain their original speeds every five days, but the mechanism
that produces this periodicity needs further investigation.
“VIRTIS is continuing its observations, and over the next
few years we expect to understand more precisely how stable or
variable the Venusian winds at the upper and lower cloud layers
are,” concluded Giuseppe Piccioni, from the Istituto
Nazionale di Astrofisica in Rome, Italy, co-Principal
Investigator for the VIRTIS instrument.
Source:
ESA

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