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Instantaneous three-dimensional thermal structure of the South Polar Vortex of Venus.

Authors :
Garate-Lopez, I.
García Muñoz, A.
Hueso, R.
Sánchez-Lavega, A.
Source :
ICARUS. Jan2015, Vol. 245, p16-31. 16p.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

The Venus thermal radiation spectrum exhibits the signature of CO 2 absorption bands. By means of inversion techniques, those bands enable the retrieval of atmospheric temperature profiles. We have analyzed VIRTIS-M-IR night-side data obtaining high-resolution thermal maps of the Venus south polar region between 55 and 85 km altitudes. This analysis is specific to three Venus Express orbits where the vortex presents different dynamical configurations. The cold collar is clearly distinguishable centered at ∼62 km (∼100 mbar) altitude level. On average, the cold collar is more than 15 K colder than the pole, but its specific temperature varies with time. In the three orbits under investigation the South Polar Vortex appears as a vertically extended hot region close to the pole and squeezed by the cold collar between altitudes 55 and 67 km but spreading equatorwards at about 74 km. Both the instantaneous temperature maps and their zonal averages show that the top altitude limit of the thermal signature from the vortex is at ∼80 km altitude, at least on the night-side of the planet. The upper part of the atmosphere (67–85 km) is more homogeneous and has long-scale horizontal temperature differences of about 25 K over horizontal distances of ∼2000 km. The lower part (55–67 km) shows more fine-scale structure, creating the vortex morphology, with thermal differences of up to about 50 K over the same altitude range and ∼500 km horizontal distances. This lower part of the atmosphere is highly affected by the upper cloud deck, leading to stronger local temperature variations and larger uncertainties in the retrieval. From the temperature maps, we also study the vertical stability of different atmospheric layers for the three vortex configurations. The static stability is always positive ( S T > 0) in the considered altitude range (55–85 km) and in the whole polar vortex. The cold collar is the most vertically stable structure at polar latitudes, while the vortex and sub-polar latitudes show lower stability values. Furthermore, the hot filaments present within the vortex exhibit lower stability values than their surroundings. The layer between 62 and 67 km resulted to be the most stable. These results are in good agreement with conclusions from previous radio occultation analyses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00191035
Volume :
245
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
ICARUS
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
99560660
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.icarus.2014.09.030