81 research outputs found

    Sunlight refraction in the mesosphere of Venus during the transit on June 8th, 2004

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    Many observers in the past gave detailed descriptions of the telescopic aspect of Venus during its extremely rare transits across the Solar disk. In particular, at the ingress and egress, the portion of the planet's disk outside the Solar photosphere has been repeatedly perceived as outlined by a thin, bright arc ("aureole"). Those historical visual observations allowed inferring the existence of Venus' atmosphere, the bright arc being correctly ascribed to the refraction of light by the outer layers of a dense atmosphere. On June 8th, 2004, fast photometry based on electronic imaging devices allowed the first quantitative analysis of the phenomenon. Several observers used a variety of acquisition systems to image the event -- ranging from amateur-sized to professional telescopes and cameras -- thus collecting for the first time a large amount of quantitative information on this atmospheric phenomenon. In this paper, after reviewing some elements brought by the historical records, we give a detailed report of the ground based observations of the 2004 transit. Besides confirming the historical descriptions, we perform the first photometric analysis of the aureole using various acquisition systems. The spatially resolved data provide measurements of the aureole flux as a function of the planetocentric latitude along the limb. A new differential refraction model of solar disk through the upper atmosphere allows us to relate the variable photometry to the latitudinal dependency of scale-height with temperature in the South polar region, as well as the latitudinal variation of the cloud-top layer altitude. We compare our measurements to recent analysis of the Venus Express VIRTIS-M, VMC and SPICAV/SOIR thermal field and aerosol distribution. Our results can be used a starting point for new, more optimized experiments during the 2012 transit event.Comment: Icarus, in pres

    No detection of methane on Mars from early ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter observations

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    The detection of methane on Mars has been interpreted as indicating that geochemical or biotic activities could persist on Mars today. A number of different measurements of methane show evidence of transient, locally elevated methane concentrations and seasonal variations in background methane concentrations. These measurements, however, are difficult to reconcile with our current understanding of the chemistry and physics of the Martian atmosphere, which-given methane's lifetime of several centuries-predicts an even, well mixed distribution of methane. Here we report highly sensitive measurements of the atmosphere of Mars in an attempt to detect methane, using the ACS and NOMAD instruments onboard the ESA-Roscosmos ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter from April to August 2018. We did not detect any methane over a range of latitudes in both hemispheres, obtaining an upper limit for methane of about 0.05 parts per billion by volume, which is 10 to 100 times lower than previously reported positive detections. We suggest that reconciliation between the present findings and the background methane concentrations found in the Gale crater would require an unknown process that can rapidly remove or sequester methane from the lower atmosphere before it spreads globally

    Martian dust storm impact on atmospheric H<sub>2</sub>O and D/H observed by ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter

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    Global dust storms on Mars are rare but can affect the Martian atmosphere for several months. They can cause changes in atmospheric dynamics and inflation of the atmosphere, primarily owing to solar heating of the dust. In turn, changes in atmospheric dynamics can affect the distribution of atmospheric water vapour, with potential implications for the atmospheric photochemistry and climate on Mars. Recent observations of the water vapour abundance in the Martian atmosphere during dust storm conditions revealed a high-altitude increase in atmospheric water vapour that was more pronounced at high northern latitudes, as well as a decrease in the water column at low latitudes. Here we present concurrent, high-resolution measurements of dust, water and semiheavy water (HDO) at the onset of a global dust storm, obtained by the NOMAD and ACS instruments onboard the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter. We report the vertical distribution of the HDO/H O ratio (D/H) from the planetary boundary layer up to an altitude of 80 kilometres. Our findings suggest that before the onset of the dust storm, HDO abundances were reduced to levels below detectability at altitudes above 40 kilometres. This decrease in HDO coincided with the presence of water-ice clouds. During the storm, an increase in the abundance of H2O and HDO was observed at altitudes between 40 and 80 kilometres. We propose that these increased abundances may be the result of warmer temperatures during the dust storm causing stronger atmospheric circulation and preventing ice cloud formation, which may confine water vapour to lower altitudes through gravitational fall and subsequent sublimation of ice crystals. The observed changes in H2O and HDO abundance occurred within a few days during the development of the dust storm, suggesting a fast impact of dust storms on the Martian atmosphere

    Optical and radiometric models of the NOMAD instrument part II: The infrared channels - SO and LNO

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    Inversion of the infrared spectra recorded by the SOIR instrument on board Venus Express

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    Vénus, deuxième planète du système solaire, souvent appelée sœur de la Terre, car présentant des caractéristiques de taille et de masse similaires, est fort différente de notre planète. En effet, son atmosphère est beaucoup plus dense et dynamiquement active que celle de la Terre. Dans ce travail, nous nous concentrerons sur la région s'étendant de 70 km à 180~km d'altitude :la mésosphère et la basse thermosphère.SOIR, acronyme de Solar Occultation in the InfraRed, est un instrument russo-franco-belge embarqué à bord de la mission Venus Express de l'Agence Spatiale Européenne. Il utilise un réseau à échelle comme élément diffractant. La plage de nombre d'onde mesurable par SOIR s'étend de 2200 cm-1 à 4400 cm-1, ou 4.3 µm à 2.2 µm en longueur d'onde. Les ordres de diffraction utiles varient de 101 à 194. Un filtre acousto-optique - AOTF - est utilisé comme passe-bande pour sélectionner les ordres de diffraction. La résolution de l'instrument varie de 0.13 à 0.24 cm-1.Du fait d'un temps de développement raccourci, presque toutes les calibrations de l'instrument ont dû être réalisées en vol. Elles comprennent les calibrations relatives au réseau à échelle (angle exact de Blaze et fonction de Blaze), au détecteur (non-uniformité pixel à pixel, courbe de sensibilité spectrale, relation entre les pixels et les nombres d'onde, résolution de l'instrument, intervalle d'échantillonnage spectral, rapport signal sur bruit, background thermique) et à l'AOTF (relation entre la radio-fréquence d'excitation de l'AOTF et les nombres d'onde, fonction de transfert de l'AOTF). L'approche et la réalisation de ces différentes calibrations sont présentées dans le présent travail. Les caractéristiques de l'instrument y sont également décrites.Un algorithme d'inversion spectrale a été développé pour le cas spécifique de SOIR. Tenant compte du mode de mesure, l'occultation solaire, la méthode de la pelure d'oignons a été implémentée dans un algorithme dit de l'Estimation Optimale. Cette méthode permet d'inverser l'ensemble des mesures spectrales en une fois, et également d'en tirer d'autres informations, comme l'amélioration de certaines caractéristiques instrumentales. Les paramètres qui sont ajustés au sein de l'algorithme sont la densité de la ou des espèces absorbant dans la région spectrale concernée, la température, les paramètres de la ligne de base, qui permettent de déterminer les caractéristiques des aérosols, le déplacement Doppler des raies qui trouve principalement son origine dans la vitesse de déplacement du satellite, et l'amélioration de certaines calibrations. Une étude de sensibilité des différents paramètres de l'algorithme est également présentée, ainsi qu'une évaluation des erreurs instrumentales systématiques.Dans l'ensemble des spectres enregistrés durant les 4 premières années de la mission, des profils verticaux de CO2, CO, H2O, HDO, SO2, H2SO4, HCl et HF ont été obtenus. Des valeurs limites de densité de OCS, H2CO, O3 et CH4 ont également été calculées. Les résultats concernant le dioxyde de carbone sont développés dans le texte. Des profils verticaux de CO2 s'étendant de 70 km à 180 km d'altitude sont analysés en profondeur. Ils sont comparés aux profils dits hydrostatiques, et des hypothèses quant à la dynamique agissant au niveau des deux terminateurs de Vénus sont formulées./Venus, second planet of the solar system, is often seen as the sister planet of the Earth. In terms of size and mass, they are indeed very similar, but the Venus atmosphere is much thicker and active. The altitude region extending from 70 km to 180~km is studied in this thesis, namely the mesosphere and the lower thermosphere.SOIR, which stands for Solar Occultation in the InfraRed, is a Russian / French / Belgian instrument flying on board of the Venus Express (VEX) spacecraft of the European Space Agency. The diffracting device of SOIR is an echelle grating. The wavenumber region studied ranges from 2200 cm-1 to 4400 cm-1, or 4.3 µm to 2.2 µm in wavelength. The diffraction orders used with SOIR vary from 101 to 194. To select the required echelle grating diffraction order, an Acousto-Optical Tunable Filter - AOTF - is located after the entrance slit of the instrument. The instrument resolution varies from 0.13 to 0.24 cm-1.SOIR was developed in a very short time. Thus, virtually all the calibrations had to be made in-flight. These concern the echelle grating (exact Blaze angle computation, Blaze function), the detector (pixel-to-pixel non-uniformity, spectral sensitivity curve, pixel-to-wavenumber relationship, instrument resolution, spectral sampling interval, signal-to-noise ratio, thermal background) and the AOTF (wavenumber to AOTF frequency relation, AOTF transfer function). The procedure for and the computation of these calibrations are described in this work, as well as the instrument characteristics.A spectral inversion algorithm was developed specifically for the SOIR measurement technique: the solar occultation. The onion peeling method is implemented using the Optimal Estimation Method. It allows the inversion of the spectral data in one go, and also the enhancement of some instrumental characteristics. The algorithm variables are the densities of the species absorbing in the diffraction order, the temperature of the atmosphere under study, the spectral background parameters, that allow the determination of the Venus aerosols characteristics, the Doppler shift (mainly linked to the shift induced by the satellite displacement), and the improvement of some instrumental calibrations. A sensitivity study on the algorithm parameters is also presented, and the instrumental systematic errors are investigated.Vertical profiles of CO2, CO, H2O, HDO, SO2, H2SO4, HCl and HF are derived from the spectra measured during the first 4 mission years. Upper limits on OCS, H2CO, O3 and CH4 have also been calculated. We focus on the carbon dioxide results in the present study. A selection of vertical profiles extending from 70 km to 180 km are analyzed in details. They are compared to the hydrostatic profiles, and propositions concerning the terminators' dynamics are formulated.Doctorat en Sciences de l'ingénieurinfo:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublishe

    Masonry homogenization: Failure envelope predictions

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