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Planetary News: Venus (2006)

A Vortex Spins Around Venus' South Pole

By Emily Lakdawalla
June 27, 2006

The European Space Agency today released several sets of images from Venus Express' first orbit around our sister planet, including a movie showing a cloud structure spinning around Venus' south pole. The Visible and Infrared Thermal Imaging Spectrometer (VIRTIS) captured the data between April 12 and April 19, as the spacecraft swept out a very long initial orbital path that took it 350,000 kilometers (220,000 miles) below the south pole.

A week of weather over Venus' south pole
A week of weather over Venus' south pole
On its first orbit of Venus, Venus Express swung out to more than 350,000 kilometers (220,000 miles) distance and was able to encompass the entire globe in one VIRTIS field of view. Over seven days, it watched a two-lobed vortex swirl around Venus' south pole. The images were captured at an infrared wavelength of 5 microns. At this wavelength, Venus' atmosphere reflects solar radiation (bright yellow dayside of Venus, at the bottom of the image). At this wavelength there is also heat emanated from the hot atmosphere at about 60 kilometers (35 miles) altitude, just above most of Venus' clouds. The polar vortex shows up as an unusually warm feature at the south pole, surrounded by a collar of colder air. Credit: ESA / VIRTIS / INAF-IASF / Obs. de Paris-LESIA

The initial capture orbit was an optimal time to study the south polar vortex of Venus for several reasons.  The initial orbit had a period of nine days, nearly all of which was spent soaring at distances of greater than 100,000 kilometers (60,000 miles) from the planet's south pole.  This gave Venus Express a continuous view of the spinning vortex.  Also, the initial orbit carried the spacecraft nearly five times the distance from Venus as its operational orbit would.  Closer views permit sharper images, but this uniquely distant view allowed Venus Express to grab single snapshots encompassing the entire globe of the planet, something that the VIRTIS instrument will not be able to repeat throughout the rest of the mission.  During the long sweep of the capture orbit, the science team took six sets of images and other data.

Science opportunities from Venus Express' initial orbit
Science opportunities from Venus Express' initial orbit
Venus Express' initial orbit lasted nine days, during which there were six opportunities (or "slots") for the sceince team to test out the spacecraft's instruments. Credit: ESA / Hâkan Svedhem

The images below were all captured by VIRTIS during these six opportunities.  As an imaging spectrometer, VIRTIS views of Venus are obtained in hundreds of wavelengths.  Each wavelength penetrates to a different depth within Venus' 80-kilometer (50-mile) thick atmosphere.  Over the seven days, Venus Express' orbit carried it toward Venus' dayside, so the planet appears to rotate slightly to the right.

  • Ultraviolet/visible (380 nanometers): At this wavelength, only the dayside of Venus is visible where its uppermost clouds at an elevation of 80 kilometers (50 miles) reflect incoming sunlight. Wispy cloud features circle at these high elevations.
  • Near infrared (1.7 microns): At this wavelength, clouds floating at elevations of about 20 to 30 kilometers (12 to 18 miles) block thermal radiation that is emitted from lower in the atmosphere. The clouds are dark; clear spots through the clouds are bright.
  • Thermal infrared (5 microns): At this wavelength, heat emitted from the upper part of the atmosphere at elevations of 60-80 kilometers (35 to 50 miles) is visible. A polar "dipole" feature rotates exactly at the south pole.
Venus' south pole
Venus' south pole
April 12, 2006
Range: 210,000 kilometers
Venus' south pole
Venus' south pole
April 13, 2006
Range: 280,000 kilometers
Venus' south pole
Venus' south pole
April 14, 2006
Range: 315,000 kilometers
Venus' south pole
Venus' south pole
April 16, 2006
Range: 315,000 kilometers
Venus' south pole
Venus' south pole
April 17, 2006
Range: 270,000 kilometers
Venus' south pole
Venus' south pole
April 19, 2006
Range: 190,000 kilometers
All images credit: ESA / VIRTIS / INAF-IASF / Obs. de Paris-LESIA