For the first time, scientists have successfully studied clouds and wind on the night side of Venus. And they’ve revealed that it's very different from the day side.
That vital data
comes from ESA’s Venus Express spacecraft, which started orbiting around Venus in 2006 (April) before being crashed into the planet in 2014 (December). Led by the
Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), this significant study was published in Nature.
We already knew
that Venus has a strange super-rotation, where its winds can spin 60 times
faster than the planet. But it appears that on the night side, this process is
even more destructive and chaotic than on the day side.
"This
study challenges our current understanding of climate modelling and,
specifically, the super-rotation, which is a key phenomenon seen at
Venus," said Håkan Svedhem, ESA Project Scientist for Venus Express, in a
statement.
The team
found that night side clouds form large, irregular patterns, dominated by waves
that appear to stand still in the atmosphere, called stationary waves. In
January this year, a huge stationary wave was seen on Venus by the Akatsuki
spacecraft, stretching for more than 10,000 kilometers (6,200 miles).
Strange,
fast filaments were seen on the night side by Venus Express. ESA/S. Naito/R.
Hueso/J. Peralta
In this
study, the scientists used data from the Visible and Infrared Thermal Imaging
Spectrometer (VIRTIS) to study the night side, using infrared to study the
clouds. They found they did not move with the atmosphere, an unexpected
discovery that was later confirmed by Akatsuki.
Stationary
waves are thought to form over mountainous or other high-elevation regions.
Weirdly though, in this data stationary waves were missing in the intermediate
and lower cloud levels, up to about 50 kilometers (31 miles) above the surface.
"We expected to find these waves in the lower levels because we see them in the upper levels, and we thought that they rose up through the cloud from the surface," co-author Ricardo Hueso of the University of the Basque Country in Bilbao, Spain, in the statement. "It's an unexpected result for sure, and we'll all need to revisit our models of Venus to explore its meaning."
Akatsuki is
continuing to orbit Venus, so it may be able to shed some light on some of the
weird things going on with the planet. With the death of Cassini today, Venus
is now one of only three planets aside from Earth – the others being Mars and
Jupiter – that have a human spacecraft in orbit.
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