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South-polar features on Venus similar to those near the north pole

  • G. Piccioni
  • , P. Drossart
  • , A. Sanchez-Lavega
  • , R. Hueso
  • , F. W. Taylor
  • , C. F. Wilson
  • , D. Grassi
  • , L. Zasova
  • , M. Moriconi
  • , A. Adriani
  • , S. Lebonnois
  • , A. Coradini
  • , B. Bézard
  • , F. Angrilli
  • , G. Arnold
  • , K. H. Baines
  • , G. Bellucci
  • , J. Benkhoff
  • , J. P. Bibring
  • , A. Blanco
  • M. I. Blecka, R. W. Carlson, A. Di Lellis, T. Encrenaz, S. Erard, S. Fonti, V. Formisano, T. Fouchet, R. Garcia, R. Haus, J. Helbert, N. I. Ignatiev, P. G.J. Irwin, Y. Langevin, M. A. Lopez-Valverde, D. Luz, L. Marinangeli, V. Orofino, A. V. Rodin, M. C. Roos-Serote, B. Saggin, D. M. Stam, D. Titov, G. Visconti, M. Zambelli, Eleonora Ammannito, Alessandra Barbis, Rainer Berlin, Carlo Bettanini, Angelo Boccaccini, Guillaume Bonnello, Marc Bouye, Fabrizio Capaccioni, Alejandro Cardesin Moinelo, Francesco Carraro, Giovanni Cherubini, Massimo Cosi, Michele Dami, Maurizio De Nino, Davide Del Vento, Marco Di Giampietro, Alessandro Donati, Olivier Dupuis, Sylvie Espinasse, Anna Fabbri, Agnes Fave, Iacopo Ficai Veltroni, Gianrico Filacchione, Katia Garceran, Yamina Ghomchi, Maurizio Giustini, Brigitte Gondet, Yann Hello, Florence Henry, Stefan Hofer, Gerard Huntzinger, Juergen Kachlicki, René Knoll, Kouach Driss, Alessandro Mazzoni, Riccardo Melchiorri, Giuseppe Mondello, Francesco Monti, Christian Neumann, Fabrizio Nuccilli, Jerome Parisot, Claudio Pasqui, Stefano Perferi, Gisbert Peter, Alain Piacentino, Carlo Pompei, Jean Michel Reess, Jean Pierre Rivet, Antonio Romano, Natalie Russ, Massimo Santoni, Adelmo Scarpelli, Alain Semery, Alain Soufflot, Douchane Stefanovitch, Enrico Suetta, Fabio Tarchi, Nazzareno Tonetti, Federico Tosi, Bernd Ulmer
  • INAF-IASF
  • LESIA - Laboratoire d'Etudes Spatiales et d'Instrumentation en Astrophysique
  • University of the Basque Country
  • University of Oxford
  • Space Research Institute (IKI)
  • Ev-K2-CNR Committee
  • INAF-IFSI
  • University of Padova
  • DLR
  • Science Division
  • Institut d'Astrophysique Spatiale
  • University of Salento
  • Polish Academy of Sciences
  • AMDLSPACE
  • Université Paris Diderot
  • Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía-CSIC
  • Universidade de Lisboa
  • University “G. D'Annunzio”
  • Politecnico di Milano
  • University of Amsterdam
  • Max-Planck-Institut für Sonnensystemforschung
  • Università Dell'Aquila
  • Galileo Avionica S.p.A.
  • ASI
  • Techno System Developments
  • Kayser Threde

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Venus has no seasons, slow rotation and a very massive atmosphere, which is mainly carbon dioxide with clouds primarily of sulphuric acid droplets. Infrared observations by previous missions to Venus revealed a bright 'dipole' feature surrounded by a cold 'collar' at its north pole. The polar dipole is a 'double-eye' feature at the centre of a vast vortex that rotates around the pole, and is possibly associated with rapid downwelling. The polar cold collar is a wide, shallow river of cold air that circulates around the polar vortex. One outstanding question has been whether the global circulation was symmetric, such that a dipole feature existed at the south pole. Here we report observations of Venus' south-polar region, where we have seen clouds with morphology much like those around the north pole, but rotating somewhat faster than the northern dipole. The vortex may extend down to the lower cloud layers that lie at about 50 km height and perhaps deeper. The spectroscopic properties of the clouds around the south pole are compatible with a sulphuric acid composition.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)637-640
Number of pages4
JournalNature
Volume450
Issue number7170
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 29 Nov 2007

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