Saturday, February 3, 2018

Across the Universe - Venus at Night in Infrared from Akatsuki

Venus at Night in Infrared from Akatsuki:

Discover the cosmos!
Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is
featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer.


2018 January 30




See Explanation.  Clicking on the picture will download  the highest resolution version available.


Venus at Night in Infrared from Akatsuki

Image Credit:
JAXA,
ISAS,
DARTS;
Processing & Copyright:
Damia Bouic



Explanation:
Why is Venus so different from Earth?

To help find out,
Japan launched the robotic
Akatsuki spacecraft which
entered orbit around Venus late
in 2015 after an unplanned five-year adventure around the inner
Solar System.

Even though Akatsuki was past its original planned lifetime,
the spacecraft and instruments were operating
so well that much of its original mission was
reinstated.

Also known as the
Venus
Climate Orbiter,
Akatsuki's
instruments
investigated unknowns about Earth's sister planet, including whether
volcanoes are still active,
whether lightning occurs in the dense atmosphere, and why wind speeds
greatly exceed the planet's rotation speed.

In the featured image taken by
Akatsuki's
IR2 camera, Venus's night side shows a jagged-edged equatorial band
of high dark clouds absorbing infrared light from hotter layers deeper in
Venus' atmosphere.

The bright orange and black stripe on the upper right is a false digital
artifact that covers part of the much brighter day side of
Venus.

Analyses of
Akatsuki images
and data has shown that Venus has
equatorial jet similar to
Earth's jet stream.



Watch:
Lunar Extravaganza

Tomorrow's picture: The First Explorer




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Jerry Bonnell (UMCP)
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