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The thermal balance of venus in light of the Pioneer Venus Mission

Authors :
Verner E. Suomi
Fredric W. Taylor
D. J. Martonchik
Henry E. Revercomb
Pete Smith
Robert W. Boese
Gerald Schubert
Martin G. Tomasko
Alvin Seiff
L. A. Sromovsky
James B. Pollack
Andrew P. Ingersoll
Curtis Covey
Source :
Journal of Geophysical Research. 85:8187
Publication Year :
1980
Publisher :
American Geophysical Union (AGU), 1980.

Abstract

Instruments flown on the Pioneer Venus orbiter and probes measured many of the properties of the atmosphere of Venus which control its thermal balance and support its high surface temperature. Estimates based on orbiter measurements place the effective radiating temperature of Venus at 228±5 K, corresponding to an emission of 153±13 W/m², and the bolometric Bond albedo at 0.80±0.02, corresponding to a solar energy absorption of 132±13 W/m². Uncertainties in these preliminary values are too large to interpret the flux difference as a true energy imbalance. A mode of submicron particles is suggested as an important source of thermal opacity near the cloud tops to explain the orbiter and probe thermal flux measurements. Comparison of the measured solar flux profile with thermal fluxes computed from the measured temperature structure and composition shows that the greenhouse mechanism explains essentially all of the 500 K difference between the surface and radiating temperatures of Venus. Precise comparison of the observed and computed value of this difference is hindered by uncertainties in the local variability of H_(2)O and in the thermal opacity of CO_2 and H_(2)O at high temperature and pressure. The directly measured thermal flux profiles at the small probe sites are surprisingly large and variable in the lower atmosphere. Observed zonal and meridional circulation are qualitatively as required to produce the observed uniformity of temperature structure. However, the present lack of quantitative estimates of the horizontal and vertical dynamical heat transports implied by these measurements is a significant gap in the understanding of the thermal balance of the atmosphere of Venus.

Details

ISSN :
01480227
Volume :
85
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Geophysical Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....106bc4944ec62dd168b4a358a5fb74b4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1029/ja085ia13p08187