Stationary waves and slowly moving features in the night upper clouds of Venus

被引:0
|
作者
J. Peralta
R. Hueso
A. Sánchez-Lavega
Y. J. Lee
A. García Muñoz
T. Kouyama
H. Sagawa
T. M. Sato
G. Piccioni
S. Tellmann
T. Imamura
T. Satoh
机构
[1] Institute of Space and Astronautical Science,Departamento de Física Aplicada I
[2] Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency,Abteilung Planetenforschung
[3] Grupo de Ciencias Planetarias,undefined
[4] E.T.S. Ingeniería,undefined
[5] Universidad del País Vasco,undefined
[6] Zentrum für Astronomie und Astrophysik,undefined
[7] Technische Universität Berlin,undefined
[8] Artificial Intelligence Research Center,undefined
[9] National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology,undefined
[10] Faculty of Science,undefined
[11] Kyoto Sangyo University,undefined
[12] Istituto di Astrofisica e Planetologia Spaziali,undefined
[13] Rheinisches Institut für Umweltforschung,undefined
[14] Universität zu Köln,undefined
[15] 50923 Cologne,undefined
[16] Graduate School of Frontier Sciences,undefined
[17] University of Tokyo,undefined
来源
Nature Astronomy | / 1卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
At the cloud top level of Venus (65–70 km altitude) the atmosphere rotates 60 times faster than the underlying surface—a phenomenon known as superrotation1,2. Whereas on Venus’s dayside the cloud top motions are well determined3,4,5,6 and Venus general circulation models predict the mean zonal flow at the upper clouds to be similar on both the day and nightside2, the nightside circulation remains poorly studied except for the polar region7,8. Here, we report global measurements of the nightside circulation at the upper cloud level. We tracked individual features in thermal emission images at 3.8 and 5.0 μm obtained between 2006 and 2008 by the Visible and Infrared Thermal Imaging Spectrometer-Mapper onboard Venus Express and in 2015 by ground-based measurements with the Medium-Resolution 0.8–5.5 Micron Spectrograph and Imager at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Infrared Telescope Facility. The zonal motions range from −110 to −60 m s–1, which is consistent with those found for the dayside but with larger dispersion6. Slow motions (−50 to −20 m s–1) were also found and remain unexplained. In addition, abundant stationary wave patterns with zonal speeds from −10 to +10 m s–1 dominate the night upper clouds and concentrate over the regions of higher surface elevation.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Congenital Stationary Night Blindness: Clinical and Genetic Features
    Kim, Angela H.
    Liu, Pei-Kang
    Chang, Yin-Hsi
    Kang, Eugene Yu-Chuan
    Wang, Hung-Hsuan
    Chen, Nelson
    Tseng, Yun-Ju
    Seo, Go Hun
    Lee, Hane
    Liu, Laura
    Chao, An-Ning
    Chen, Kuan-Jen
    Hwang, Yih-Shiou
    Wu, Wei-Chi
    Lai, Chi-Chun
    Tsang, Stephen H.
    Hsiao, Meng-Chang
    Wang, Nan-Kai
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR SCIENCES, 2022, 23 (23)
  • [32] SPECTROSCOPIC OBSERVATIONS OF BRIGHT AND DARK EMISSION FEATURES ON THE NIGHT SIDE OF VENUS
    BELL, JF
    CRISP, D
    LUCEY, PG
    OZOROSKI, TA
    SINTON, WM
    WILLIS, SC
    CAMPBELL, BA
    SCIENCE, 1991, 252 (5010) : 1293 - 1296
  • [33] Stationary planetary waves in upper mesospheric winds
    Atmospheric Chemistry Division, Natl. Ctr. for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, CO, United States
    不详
    J Atmos Sci, 16 (2129-2145):
  • [34] FEATURES OF CONVECTIVE HEAT EMISSION OF BODIES SLOWLY MOVING IN THE ATMOSPHERE
    GLAGOLEV, IA
    DOKLADY AKADEMII NAUK SSSR, 1980, 251 (03): : 583 - 586
  • [35] Stationary planetary waves in upper mesospheric winds
    Smith, AK
    JOURNAL OF THE ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES, 1997, 54 (16) : 2129 - 2145
  • [36] The origin of stationary planetary waves in the upper mesosphere
    Smith, AK
    JOURNAL OF THE ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES, 2003, 60 (24) : 3033 - 3041
  • [37] Polarimetric detection of slowly moving targets embedded in stationary ground clutter - Summary
    Morin, X
    Pottier, E
    Saillard, J
    Pasdeloup, C
    Delhote, C
    JOURNAL OF ELECTROMAGNETIC WAVES AND APPLICATIONS, 1997, 11 (04) : 431 - 436
  • [38] Characterising atmospheric gravity waves on the nightside lower clouds of Venus: A systematic analysis
    Silva, J.E.
    MacHado, P.
    Peralta, J.
    Brasil, F.
    Lebonnois, S.
    Lefèvre, M.
    Astronomy and Astrophysics, 2021, 649
  • [39] MAGNETOACOUSTIC AND ALFVEN POTENTIALS FOR STATIONARY WAVES IN A MOVING PLASMA
    MCKENZIE, JF
    WOODWARD, TI
    INHESTER, B
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-SPACE PHYSICS, 1993, 98 (A6) : 9201 - 9213