Dayside temperatures in the Venus upper atmosphere from Venus Express/VIRTIS nadir measurements at 4.3 μm

DOI: 
10.1051/0004-6361/201527191
Publication date: 
01/01/2016
Main author: 
Peralta J.
IAA authors: 
Peralta;López-Valverde
Authors: 
Peralta J., López-Valverde M.A., Gilli G., Piccialli A.
Journal: 
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Publication type: 
Article
Volume: 
585
Pages: 
Number: 
A53
Abstract: 
In this work, we analysed nadir observations of atmospheric infrared emissions carried out by VIRTIS, a high-resolution spectrometer on board the European spacecraft Venus Express. We focused on the ro-vibrational band of CO2 at 4.3 μm on the dayside, whose fluorescence originates in the Venus upper mesosphere and above. This is the first time that a systematic sounding of these non-local thermodynamic equilibrium (NLTE) emissions has been carried out in Venus using this geometry. As many as 143,218 spectra have been analysed on the dayside during the period 14/05/2006 to 14/09/2009. We designed an inversion method to obtain the atmospheric temperature from these non-thermal observations, including a NLTE line-by-line forward model and a pre-computed set of spectra for a set of thermal structures and illumination conditions. Our measurements sound a broad region of the upper mesosphere and lower thermosphere of Venus ranging from 10-2-10-5 mb (which in the Venus International Reference Atmosphere, VIRA, is approximately 100-150 km during the daytime) and show a maximum around 195 ± 10 K in the subsolar region, decreasing with latitude and local time towards the terminator. This is in qualitative agreement with predictions by a Venus Thermospheric General Circulation Model (VTGCM) after a proper averaging of altitudes for meaningful comparisons, although our temperatures are colder than the model by about 25 K throughout. We estimate a thermal gradient of about 35 K between the subsolar and antisolar points when comparing our data with nightside temperatures measured at similar altitudes by SPICAV, another instrument on Venus Express (VEx). Our data show a stable temperature structure through five years of measurements, but we also found episodes of strong heating/cooling to occur in the subsolar region of less than two days. © 2015 ESO.
Database: 
SCOPUS
WOK
ADS
SCOPUS
URL: 
https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/#abs/2016A&A...585A..53P/abstract
ADS Bibcode: 
2016A&A...585A..53P
Keywords: 
Instrumentation: spectrographs; Methods: data analysis; Molecular processes; Planets and satellites: atmospheres; Radiation mechanisms: non-thermal; Radiative transfer