Morphology and dynamics of Venus oxygen airglow from Venus Express/Visible and Infrared Thermal Imaging Spectrometer observations

被引:50
|
作者
Hueso, R. [1 ]
Sanchez-Lavega, A. [1 ]
Piccioni, G. [2 ]
Drossart, P. [3 ]
Gerard, J. C. [4 ]
Khatuntsev, I.
Zasova, L.
Migliorini, A. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Basque Country, Dept Fis Aplicada 1, ETS Ingenieros, E-48013 Bilbao, Spain
[2] INAF IASF Roma, Ist Astrofis Spaziale & Fis Cosm, I-00133 Rome, Italy
[3] Univ Paris Diderot, Observ Paris, Lab Etudes Spatiales & Instrumentat Astrophys, CNRS,UPMC, F-92195 Meudon, France
[4] Univ Liege, Lab Phys Atmospher & Planetaire, B-4000 Liege, Belgium
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
D O I
10.1029/2008JE003081
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
Images obtained by the Visible and Infrared Thermal Imaging Spectrometer (VIRTIS)-M channel instrument onboard Venus Express have been used to retrieve maps and apparent motions of the O-2 ((1)Delta) infrared nightglow on Venus at 1.27 mu m. The nightglow distribution is highly inhomogeneous with the regions of brightest emission generally located at low latitudes near the midnight meridian. Unexpectedly some orbits show also intense airglow activity over the south polar region. The spatially resolved airglow is spectacularly variable not only in its morphology and intensity but also in the apparent motions of the airglow small- and large-scale structures. Visual tracking of the bright features allowed to obtain mean zonal and meridional motions related to the subsolar to antisolar circulation. The zonal velocity is dominated by an intense prograde jet (contrary to the retrograde planetary rotation) from dawn to midnight extending up to 22 hours in local time with lower velocities and reversed sign from dusk. Typical zonal velocities range between +60 (prograde) to -50 (retrograde) m/s, whereas most meridional velocities range from -20 (poleward) to +100 m/s (equatorward) with an average meridional circulation of +20 m/s toward low latitudes. The brightest small- scale (similar to 100 km) features appear correlated with locations of apparent convergence which may be a signature of compression and downwelling, whereas this is not evident for the largescale structures suggesting slow subsidence over large areas mixed with horizontal motions. We argue that part of the tracked motions are representative of real motions at the mesosphere over an altitude range of 95-107 km.
引用
收藏
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Venus Express observations of atmospheric oxygen escape during the passage of several coronal mass ejections
    Luhmann, J. G.
    Fedorov, A.
    Barabash, S.
    Carlsson, E.
    Futaana, Y.
    Zhang, T. L.
    Russell, C. T.
    Lyon, J. G.
    Ledvina, S. A.
    Brain, D. A.
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-PLANETS, 2008, 113
  • [42] The temperature of the Venus mesosphere from O2 (a1 Δg) airglow observations
    Bailey, Jeremy
    Meadows, V. S.
    Chamberlain, S.
    Crisp, D.
    ICARUS, 2008, 197 (01) : 247 - 259
  • [43] Quantification of middle and lower cloud variability and mesoscale dynamics from Venus Express/VIRTIS observations at 1.74 μm
    McGouldrick, Kevin
    Momary, Thomas W.
    Baines, Kevin H.
    Grinspoon, David H.
    ICARUS, 2012, 217 (02) : 615 - 628
  • [44] THE GALILEO ENCOUNTER WITH VENUS - RESULTS FROM THE NEAR-INFRARED MAPPING SPECTROMETER
    CARLSON, RW
    TAYLOR, FW
    PLANETARY AND SPACE SCIENCE, 1993, 41 (07) : 475 - 476
  • [45] Measurements of thermal structure and thermal contrasts in the atmosphere of Venus and related dynamical observations: Results From the four Pioneer Venus Probes
    Seiff, A.
    Kirk, Donn B.
    Young, Richard E.
    Blanchard, Robert C.
    Findlay, John T.
    Kelly, G. M.
    Sommer, S. C.
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-SPACE PHYSICS, 1980, 85 (A13) : 7903 - 7933
  • [46] Concurrent observations of the ultraviolet nitric oxide and infrared O2 nightglow emissions with Venus Express
    Gerard, J. -C.
    Cox, C.
    Soret, L.
    Saglam, A.
    Piccioni, G.
    Bertaux, J. -L.
    Drossart, P.
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-PLANETS, 2009, 114
  • [47] RADIATIVE BALANCE IN THE MESOSPHERE OF VENUS FROM THE VENERA-15 INFRARED SPECTROMETER RESULTS
    TITOV, DV
    EXPLORATION OF VENUS AND MARS ATMOSPHERES, 1995, 15 (04): : 73 - 77
  • [48] VIRTIS: Visible Infrared Thermal Imaging Spectrometer for the Rosetta mission
    Reininger, F
    Coradini, A
    Capaccioni, F
    Capria, M
    Cerroni, P
    DeSanctis, M
    Magni, G
    Drossart, P
    Barucci, M
    BockeleeMorvan, D
    Combes, J
    Crovisier, J
    Encrenaz, T
    Reess, J
    Semery, A
    Tiphene, D
    Arnold, G
    Carsenty, U
    Michaelis, H
    Mottola, S
    Neukum, G
    Peter, G
    Schade, U
    Taylor, F
    Calcutt, S
    Vellacott, T
    Venters, P
    Watkins, R
    Bellucci, G
    Formisano, V
    Angrilli, F
    Bianchini, G
    Saggin, B
    Bussoletti, E
    Colangeli, L
    Mennella, V
    Fonti, S
    Bibring, J
    Langevin, Y
    Schmitt, B
    Combi, M
    Fink, U
    McCord, T
    Ip, W
    Carlson, R
    Jennings, E
    IMAGING SPECTROMETRY II, 1996, 2819 : 66 - 77
  • [49] TECTONICS OF THE SOUTHERN ESCARPMENT OF ISHTAR TERRA ON VENUS FROM OBSERVATIONS OF MORPHOLOGY AND GRAVITY
    JANLE, P
    JANNSEN, D
    EARTH MOON AND PLANETS, 1984, 31 (02): : 141 - 155
  • [50] COMPARISON OF GROUND-BASED AND SPACECRAFT OBSERVATIONS OF THE INFRARED-EMISSION FROM VENUS - THE NATURE OF THERMAL CONTRASTS
    DINER, DJ
    APT, J
    ELSON, LS
    ICARUS, 1982, 52 (02) : 301 - 319