A layer of ozone detected in the nightside upper atmosphere of Venus
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Authors
Montmessin, F.
Bertaux, J.-L.
Lefèvre, F.
Marcq, E.
Belyaev, D.
Gérard, J.-C.
Korablev, O.
Fedorova, A.
Sarago, V.
Vandaele, A.C.
Discipline
Physical sciences
Subject
Atmospheres
Chemistry
Atmospheres
Composition
Occultations
Venus
Atmosphere
Spectroscopy
Audience
Scientific
Date
2011Metadata
Show full item recordDescription
To date, ozone has only been identified in the atmospheres of Earth and Mars. This study reports the first detection of ozone in the atmosphere of Venus by the SPICAV ultraviolet instrument onboard the Venus Express spacecraft. Venusian ozone is characterized by a vertically confined and horizontally variable layer residing in the thermosphere at a mean altitude of 100 km, with local concentrations of the order of 107–108 molecules cm−3. The observed ozone concentrations are consistent with values expected for a chlorine-catalyzed destruction scheme, indicating that the key chemical reactions operating in Earth’s upper stratosphere may also operate on Venus.
Citation
Montmessin, F.; Bertaux, J.-L.; Lefèvre, F.; Marcq, E.; Belyaev, D.; Gérard, J.-C.; Korablev, O.; Fedorova, A.; Sarago, V.; Vandaele, A.C. (2011). A layer of ozone detected in the nightside upper atmosphere of Venus. , Icarus, Vol. 216, Issue 1, 82-85, DOI: 10.1016/j.icarus.2011.08.010.Identifiers
url:
Type
Article
Peer-Review
Yes
Language
eng
