Back to Search Start Over

Initial products of Akatsuki 1-μm camera

Authors :
Naomoto Iwagami
Takeshi Sakanoi
George L. Hashimoto
Kenta Sawai
Shoko Ohtsuki
Seiko Takagi
Kazunori Uemizu
Munetaka Ueno
Shingo Kameda
Shin-ya Murakami
Masato Nakamura
Nobuaki Ishii
Takumi Abe
Takehiko Satoh
Takeshi Imamura
Chikako Hirose
Makoto Suzuki
Naru Hirata
Atsushi Yamazaki
Takao M. Sato
Manabu Yamada
Yukio Yamamoto
Tetsuya Fukuhara
Kazunori Ogohara
Hiroki Ando
Ko-ichiro Sugiyama
Hiroki Kashimura
Toru Kouyama
Source :
Earth, Planets and Space, Vol 70, Iss 1, Pp 1-19 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
SpringerOpen, 2018.

Abstract

Abstract The status and initial products of the 1-μm camera onboard the Akatsuki mission to Venus are presented. After the successful retrial of Venus’ orbit insertion on Dec. 2015 (5 years after the failure in Dec. 2010), and after a long cruise under intense radiation, damage in the detector seems small and fortunately insignificant in the final quality of the images. More than 600 dayside images have been obtained since the beginning of regular operation on Apr. 2016 although nightside images are less numerous (about 150 in total at three wavelengths) due to the light scattered from the bright dayside. However, data acquisition stopped after December 07, 2016, due to malfunction of the electronics and has not been resumed since then. The 0.90-µm dayside images are of sufficient quality for the cloud-tracking procedure to retrieve wind field in the cloud region. The results appear to be similar to those reported by previous 1-μm imaging by Galileo and Venus Express. The representative altitude sampled for such dayside images is estimated to be 51–55 km. Also, the quality of the nightside 1.01-µm images is sufficient for a search for active volcanism, since interference due to cloud inhomogeneity appears to be insignificant. The quality of the 0.97-µm images may be insufficient to achieve the expected spatial resolution for the near-surface H2O mixing ratio retrievals.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18805981
Volume :
70
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Earth, Planets and Space
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.1cacd829b7d74e6fb843a332b7c9dcf5
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40623-017-0773-5