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An investigation of the SO2 content of the venusian mesosphere using SPICAV-UV in nadir mode
Using the SPICAV-UV spectrometer aboard Venus Express in nadir mode, we were able to derive spectral radiance factors in the middle atmosphere of Venus in the 170-320nm range at a spectral resolution of R a[control]f200 during 2006 and 2007 in the northern hemisphere. By comparison with a radiative...
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Published in: | Icarus (New York, N.Y. 1962) N.Y. 1962), 2011-01, Vol.211 (1), p.58-69 |
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container_title | Icarus (New York, N.Y. 1962) |
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creator | Marcq, Emmanuel Belyaev, Denis Montmessin, Franck Fedorova, Anna Bertaux, Jean-Loup Vandaele, Ann Carine Neefs, Eddy |
description | Using the SPICAV-UV spectrometer aboard Venus Express in nadir mode, we were able to derive spectral radiance factors in the middle atmosphere of Venus in the 170-320nm range at a spectral resolution of R a[control]f200 during 2006 and 2007 in the northern hemisphere. By comparison with a radiative transfer model of the upper atmosphere of Venus, we could derive column abundance above the visible cloud top for SO2 using its spectral absorption bands near 280 and 220nm. SO2 column densities show large temporal and spatial variations on a horizontal scale of a few hundred kilometers. Typical SO2 column densities at low latitudes (up to 50A degree N) were found between 5 and 50I14m-atm, whereas in the northern polar region SO2 content was usually below 5I14m-atm. The observed latitudinal variations follow closely the cloud top altitude derived by SPICAV-IR and are thought to be of dynamical origin. Also, a sudden increase of SO2 column density in the whole northern hemisphere has been observed in early 2007, possibly related to a convective episode advecting some deep SO2 into the upper atmosphere. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1016/j.icarus.2010.08.021 |
format | article |
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By comparison with a radiative transfer model of the upper atmosphere of Venus, we could derive column abundance above the visible cloud top for SO2 using its spectral absorption bands near 280 and 220nm. SO2 column densities show large temporal and spatial variations on a horizontal scale of a few hundred kilometers. Typical SO2 column densities at low latitudes (up to 50A degree N) were found between 5 and 50I14m-atm, whereas in the northern polar region SO2 content was usually below 5I14m-atm. The observed latitudinal variations follow closely the cloud top altitude derived by SPICAV-IR and are thought to be of dynamical origin. 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subjects | Astrophysics Earth and Planetary Astrophysics Physics Sciences of the Universe |
title | An investigation of the SO2 content of the venusian mesosphere using SPICAV-UV in nadir mode |
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