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Venus South Pole at 5 Micron

Venus South Pole at 5 Micron


Date: 27 June 2006
Satellite: Venus Express
Depicts: Composite of 6 views of Venus south pole
Copyright: ESA/VIRTIS/INAF-IASF/Obs. de Paris-LESIA

This composite image shows six false-colour infrared views of Venus as seen by the Ultraviolet/Visible/Near-Infrared spectrometer (VIRTIS) between 12 and 19 April 2006, during the highly elliptical capture orbit around the planet.

The images taken at 5 microns were obtained at six different time slots and at different distances from Venus (from left to right, top to botom):

  • 12 April: from 210 000 kilometres
  • 13 April: from 280 000 kilometres
  • 14 April, from 315 000 kilometres
  • 16 April: from 315 000 kilometres
  • 17 April: from 270 000 kilometres
  • 19 April: from 190 000 kilometres

The south polar vortex structure is visible from different view points close to the centre of each image.

The brighter regions in the images are from both solar radiation reflecting of the upper atmosphere (between ~60 and ~80 km altitude) and from thermal radiation originating in the lower atmosphere, just above the cloud top, located at about 60 kilometres altitude.

Last Update: 1 September 2019
28-Mar-2024 23:21 UT

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