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Venera 11 and Venera 12 observations of e.u.v. emissions from the upper atmosphere of Venus

Authors :
N. N. Romanova
J. L. Bertaux
J. E. Blamont
V.M. Lepine
V. G. Kurt
A. S. Smirnov
Source :
Planetary and Space Science. 29:149-166
Publication Year :
1981
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 1981.

Abstract

The results obtained by two extreme ultra violet (e.u.v.) spectrophotometers flown near Venus on VENERA 11 and VENERA 12 in December 1978 are presented. Detectors were placed at discrete wavelength positions to measure e.u.v. emissions from the upper atmosphere of Venus while the spacecraft were drifting on their fly-by orbits. The emissions of HI 121.6 nm (Ly- α ), HeI 58.4 nm, and OI 130.4 nm were measured with unprecedented sensitivity and spatial resolution. An OI signal of 500 Rayleigh (R) measured outside the disc suggested the existence of a large bulge of oxygen atoms. The e.u.v. emissions of two ionic species. OII 83.4 nm and HeII 30.4 nm, were measured for the first time in the atmosphere of Venus. The zero order detector of VENERA 12 indicated the presence of a very intense e.u.v. emission (28 kR) lying between the monitored wavelengths. This emission, which was only 3 kR for VENERA 11, is likely to be associated with the solar wind-ionosphere interaction. An attempt to measure ArI and NeI resonance emissions failed. The Lyman alpha (Ly- α ) interplanetary background was 4 to 5 times larger than expected, suggestive of a very intense solar flux or an increase of the interplanetary density. The distribution of hydrogen indicates two populations with temperatures of 400 and 700 K.

Details

ISSN :
00320633
Volume :
29
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Planetary and Space Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........d600f231aa0f4561e0ef8e6f8b8ead72
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/0032-0633(81)90029-5