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Spin state and moment of inertia of Venus

Authors :
Margot, Jean-Luc
Campbell, Donald B.
Giorgini, Jon D.
Jao, Joseph S.
Snedeker, Lawrence G.
Ghigo, Frank D.
Bonsall, Amber
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Fundamental properties of the planet Venus, such as its internal mass distribution and variations in length of day, have remained unknown. We used Earth-based observations of radar speckles tied to the rotation of Venus obtained in 2006-2020 to measure its spin axis orientation, spin precession rate, moment of inertia, and length-of-day variations. Venus is tilted by 2.6392 $\pm$ 0.0008 degrees ($1\sigma$) with respect to its orbital plane. The spin axis precesses at a rate of 44.58 $\pm$ 3.3 arcseconds per year ($1\sigma$), which gives a normalized moment of inertia of 0.337 $\pm$ 0.024 and yields a rough estimate of the size of the core. The average sidereal day on Venus in the 2006-2020 interval is 243.0226 $\pm$ 0.0013 Earth days ($1\sigma$). The spin period of the solid planet exhibits variations of 61 ppm ($\sim$20 minutes) with a possible diurnal or semidiurnal forcing. The length-of-day variations imply that changes in atmospheric angular momentum of at least $\sim$4% are transferred to the solid planet.<br />Comment: 20 pages, 7 figures, supplementary information. Submitted to Nature Astronomy on October 14, 2020

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2103.01504
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41550-021-01339-7