Winds and cloud morphology in the southern polar region of Venus

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Luz, David
Data de Publicação: 2010
Outros Autores: Berry, David L., Peralta, Javier, Piccioni, Giuseppe, Drossart, Pierre, VIRTIS-Venus Express Team
Tipo de documento: Artigo de conferência
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos)
Texto Completo: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/6911
Resumo: Spinning on average 60 times faster than the surface, the atmosphere of Venus is superrotational, a state in which the averaged angular momentum is much greater than that corresponding to co-rotation with the solid globe. The rapid mean flow, which is main- tained by momentum transports in the deep atmo- sphere, presents a puzzle to the atmospheric and plan- etary sciences[1]. After previous missions revealed a bright polar feature at the north pole[9, 10], the Venus Express spacecraft discovered a fast-rotating counter- part at the southern polar region[6], which has been identified as a vortex[2]. The southern polar vortex can be observed at 5.0 μm as a bright, highly vari- able structure which is ∼ 15 K warmer than the sur- rounding air[6]. Although the Venus superrotation has been measured by tracking cloud features at UV and infrared wavelengths[7, 4, 8, 5], the winds in the po- lar region remain poorly constrained. Characterizing the zonal and meridional circulation in this region, as well as their variability, is crucial for understanding the mechanisms that maintain superrotation. In partic- ular, mean zonal winds are necessary to understand the nature of the polar vortex, how it is connected with the general circulation of the atmosphere, and to diagnose momentum transports. Winds at 45 and 65 km can be detected from cloud motion monitoring by the VIRTIS-M subsection on- board the Venus Express (VEX) spacecraft. Our ob- jective is to provide direct wind measurements at cloud tops and in the lower cloud level, in order to help in- terpret the VEX observations concerning the meso- spheric wind regime and temperature fields. In par- ticular, we present direct measurements of the zonal and meridional winds at both altitudes. For this work we selected nadir-pointing, high- spatial resolution VIRTIS data cubes obtained from apocenter in order to minimize the geometric distortion of the polar region. On average these contain lat- itudes extending from the pole to 70S. Since the VIR- TIS field of view is rectangular, lower latitudes are also present but cannot be observed over full latitude circles. Cloud tracking has been performed using the method of digital correlation described in a previous article[3]. VEX orbits were selected so as to have in each one at least one pair of images suitable for track- ing, i.e., with a considerable spatial overlap. Tracking has been performed on pairs of monochromatic im- ages at wavelengths of 1.74 μm, 2.3 μm, 3.93 μm and 5 μm. In the data cubes obtained with longer integration times (3s) the long-wavelength range of the spectrum, above 4.3 μm, is saturated. In those cases we se- lected the 3.93 μm radiance map instead of the one at 5 μm. The monochromatic radiance maps are first ex- tracted from data cubes that have undergone the stan- dard VIRTIS calibration procedures. The maps are then projected onto a polar stereographic grid and the wind retrieval procedure is applied. A total of 20 lat- itude bins, separated by 1 degree were used. For the analysis of transient motions the spatial averaging was done in 72 longitude bins at 5 degree intervals. In order to evaluate the variability over the time scale of one orbit, we have computed the orbital aver- ages, i.e., averages of all measurements coming from one given orbit. These orbital averages are only ap- proximations to temporal averages, since they do not cover one full rotation. The differences between same- orbit averages are apparent in both day and night side averages. Some notable features indicating different day and night side regimes are also apparent in the or- bit averages, and the boundary of the cold collar ap- pears to be a transition latitude. Moreover, the vari- ability that can be observed from orbit to orbit and be- tween series of observations from the same orbit indi- cates that departures from this mean flow are large and a persistent feature of the global circulation.
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spelling Winds and cloud morphology in the southern polar region of VenusVenusPlanetary AtmospheresVenus ExpressVIRTISSpinning on average 60 times faster than the surface, the atmosphere of Venus is superrotational, a state in which the averaged angular momentum is much greater than that corresponding to co-rotation with the solid globe. The rapid mean flow, which is main- tained by momentum transports in the deep atmo- sphere, presents a puzzle to the atmospheric and plan- etary sciences[1]. After previous missions revealed a bright polar feature at the north pole[9, 10], the Venus Express spacecraft discovered a fast-rotating counter- part at the southern polar region[6], which has been identified as a vortex[2]. The southern polar vortex can be observed at 5.0 μm as a bright, highly vari- able structure which is ∼ 15 K warmer than the sur- rounding air[6]. Although the Venus superrotation has been measured by tracking cloud features at UV and infrared wavelengths[7, 4, 8, 5], the winds in the po- lar region remain poorly constrained. Characterizing the zonal and meridional circulation in this region, as well as their variability, is crucial for understanding the mechanisms that maintain superrotation. In partic- ular, mean zonal winds are necessary to understand the nature of the polar vortex, how it is connected with the general circulation of the atmosphere, and to diagnose momentum transports. Winds at 45 and 65 km can be detected from cloud motion monitoring by the VIRTIS-M subsection on- board the Venus Express (VEX) spacecraft. Our ob- jective is to provide direct wind measurements at cloud tops and in the lower cloud level, in order to help in- terpret the VEX observations concerning the meso- spheric wind regime and temperature fields. In par- ticular, we present direct measurements of the zonal and meridional winds at both altitudes. For this work we selected nadir-pointing, high- spatial resolution VIRTIS data cubes obtained from apocenter in order to minimize the geometric distortion of the polar region. On average these contain lat- itudes extending from the pole to 70S. Since the VIR- TIS field of view is rectangular, lower latitudes are also present but cannot be observed over full latitude circles. Cloud tracking has been performed using the method of digital correlation described in a previous article[3]. VEX orbits were selected so as to have in each one at least one pair of images suitable for track- ing, i.e., with a considerable spatial overlap. Tracking has been performed on pairs of monochromatic im- ages at wavelengths of 1.74 μm, 2.3 μm, 3.93 μm and 5 μm. In the data cubes obtained with longer integration times (3s) the long-wavelength range of the spectrum, above 4.3 μm, is saturated. In those cases we se- lected the 3.93 μm radiance map instead of the one at 5 μm. The monochromatic radiance maps are first ex- tracted from data cubes that have undergone the stan- dard VIRTIS calibration procedures. The maps are then projected onto a polar stereographic grid and the wind retrieval procedure is applied. A total of 20 lat- itude bins, separated by 1 degree were used. For the analysis of transient motions the spatial averaging was done in 72 longitude bins at 5 degree intervals. In order to evaluate the variability over the time scale of one orbit, we have computed the orbital aver- ages, i.e., averages of all measurements coming from one given orbit. These orbital averages are only ap- proximations to temporal averages, since they do not cover one full rotation. The differences between same- orbit averages are apparent in both day and night side averages. Some notable features indicating different day and night side regimes are also apparent in the or- bit averages, and the boundary of the cold collar ap- pears to be a transition latitude. Moreover, the vari- ability that can be observed from orbit to orbit and be- tween series of observations from the same orbit indi- cates that departures from this mean flow are large and a persistent feature of the global circulation.European Planetary Science Congress 20102012-12-21T12:25:16Z2012-12-212010-01-01T00:00:00Zinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObjecthttp://hdl.handle.net/10174/6911http://hdl.handle.net/10174/6911engLuz, D., Berry, D.L., Peralta, J., Piccioni, G., Drossart P. and the VIRTIS-Venus Express Team. Winds and Cloud Morphology in the Southern Polar Region of Venus, European Planetary Science Congress 2010, Rome, 2010.http://meetings.copernicus.org/epsc2010/abstracts/EPSC2010-670.pdfsimnaonaonddberry@uevora.ptndndndnd343Luz, DavidBerry, David L.Peralta, JavierPiccioni, GiuseppeDrossart, PierreVIRTIS-Venus Express Teaminfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessreponame:Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos)instname:Agência para a Sociedade do Conhecimento (UMIC) - FCT - Sociedade da Informaçãoinstacron:RCAAP2024-01-03T18:46:37Zoai:dspace.uevora.pt:10174/6911Portal AgregadorONGhttps://www.rcaap.pt/oai/openaireopendoar:71602024-03-20T01:01:33.562069Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos) - Agência para a Sociedade do Conhecimento (UMIC) - FCT - Sociedade da Informaçãofalse
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Winds and cloud morphology in the southern polar region of Venus
title Winds and cloud morphology in the southern polar region of Venus
spellingShingle Winds and cloud morphology in the southern polar region of Venus
Luz, David
Venus
Planetary Atmospheres
Venus Express
VIRTIS
title_short Winds and cloud morphology in the southern polar region of Venus
title_full Winds and cloud morphology in the southern polar region of Venus
title_fullStr Winds and cloud morphology in the southern polar region of Venus
title_full_unstemmed Winds and cloud morphology in the southern polar region of Venus
title_sort Winds and cloud morphology in the southern polar region of Venus
author Luz, David
author_facet Luz, David
Berry, David L.
Peralta, Javier
Piccioni, Giuseppe
Drossart, Pierre
VIRTIS-Venus Express Team
author_role author
author2 Berry, David L.
Peralta, Javier
Piccioni, Giuseppe
Drossart, Pierre
VIRTIS-Venus Express Team
author2_role author
author
author
author
author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Luz, David
Berry, David L.
Peralta, Javier
Piccioni, Giuseppe
Drossart, Pierre
VIRTIS-Venus Express Team
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Venus
Planetary Atmospheres
Venus Express
VIRTIS
topic Venus
Planetary Atmospheres
Venus Express
VIRTIS
description Spinning on average 60 times faster than the surface, the atmosphere of Venus is superrotational, a state in which the averaged angular momentum is much greater than that corresponding to co-rotation with the solid globe. The rapid mean flow, which is main- tained by momentum transports in the deep atmo- sphere, presents a puzzle to the atmospheric and plan- etary sciences[1]. After previous missions revealed a bright polar feature at the north pole[9, 10], the Venus Express spacecraft discovered a fast-rotating counter- part at the southern polar region[6], which has been identified as a vortex[2]. The southern polar vortex can be observed at 5.0 μm as a bright, highly vari- able structure which is ∼ 15 K warmer than the sur- rounding air[6]. Although the Venus superrotation has been measured by tracking cloud features at UV and infrared wavelengths[7, 4, 8, 5], the winds in the po- lar region remain poorly constrained. Characterizing the zonal and meridional circulation in this region, as well as their variability, is crucial for understanding the mechanisms that maintain superrotation. In partic- ular, mean zonal winds are necessary to understand the nature of the polar vortex, how it is connected with the general circulation of the atmosphere, and to diagnose momentum transports. Winds at 45 and 65 km can be detected from cloud motion monitoring by the VIRTIS-M subsection on- board the Venus Express (VEX) spacecraft. Our ob- jective is to provide direct wind measurements at cloud tops and in the lower cloud level, in order to help in- terpret the VEX observations concerning the meso- spheric wind regime and temperature fields. In par- ticular, we present direct measurements of the zonal and meridional winds at both altitudes. For this work we selected nadir-pointing, high- spatial resolution VIRTIS data cubes obtained from apocenter in order to minimize the geometric distortion of the polar region. On average these contain lat- itudes extending from the pole to 70S. Since the VIR- TIS field of view is rectangular, lower latitudes are also present but cannot be observed over full latitude circles. Cloud tracking has been performed using the method of digital correlation described in a previous article[3]. VEX orbits were selected so as to have in each one at least one pair of images suitable for track- ing, i.e., with a considerable spatial overlap. Tracking has been performed on pairs of monochromatic im- ages at wavelengths of 1.74 μm, 2.3 μm, 3.93 μm and 5 μm. In the data cubes obtained with longer integration times (3s) the long-wavelength range of the spectrum, above 4.3 μm, is saturated. In those cases we se- lected the 3.93 μm radiance map instead of the one at 5 μm. The monochromatic radiance maps are first ex- tracted from data cubes that have undergone the stan- dard VIRTIS calibration procedures. The maps are then projected onto a polar stereographic grid and the wind retrieval procedure is applied. A total of 20 lat- itude bins, separated by 1 degree were used. For the analysis of transient motions the spatial averaging was done in 72 longitude bins at 5 degree intervals. In order to evaluate the variability over the time scale of one orbit, we have computed the orbital aver- ages, i.e., averages of all measurements coming from one given orbit. These orbital averages are only ap- proximations to temporal averages, since they do not cover one full rotation. The differences between same- orbit averages are apparent in both day and night side averages. Some notable features indicating different day and night side regimes are also apparent in the or- bit averages, and the boundary of the cold collar ap- pears to be a transition latitude. Moreover, the vari- ability that can be observed from orbit to orbit and be- tween series of observations from the same orbit indi- cates that departures from this mean flow are large and a persistent feature of the global circulation.
publishDate 2010
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2010-01-01T00:00:00Z
2012-12-21T12:25:16Z
2012-12-21
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dc.identifier.uri.fl_str_mv http://hdl.handle.net/10174/6911
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/6911
url http://hdl.handle.net/10174/6911
dc.language.iso.fl_str_mv eng
language eng
dc.relation.none.fl_str_mv Luz, D., Berry, D.L., Peralta, J., Piccioni, G., Drossart P. and the VIRTIS-Venus Express Team. Winds and Cloud Morphology in the Southern Polar Region of Venus, European Planetary Science Congress 2010, Rome, 2010.
http://meetings.copernicus.org/epsc2010/abstracts/EPSC2010-670.pdf
sim
nao
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