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H2O-H2SO4 system in Venus' clouds and OCS, CO, and H2SO4 profiles in Venus' troposphere
- Source :
- Icarus. 109(1)
- Publication Year :
- 1994
- Publisher :
- United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 1994.
-
Abstract
- A coupled problem of diffusion and condensation is solved for the H2SO4-H2O system in Venus' cloud layer. The position of the lower cloud boundary and profiles of the H2O and H2SO4 vapor mixing ratios and of the H2O/H2SO4 ratio of sulfuric acid aerosol and its flux are calculated as functions of the column photochemical production rate of sulfuric acid, Phi(sub H2SO4). Variations of the lower cloud boundary are considered. Our basic model, which is constrained to yield f(sub H2O) (30 km) = 30 ppm (Pollack et al. 1993), predicts the position of the lower cloud boundary at 48.4 km coinciding with the mean Pioneer Venus value, the peak H2SO4 mixing ratio of 5.4 ppm, and the H2SO4 production rate Phi(sub H2SO4) = 2.2 x 10(exp 12)/sq cm/s. The sulfur to sulfuric acid mass flux ratio in the clouds is 1:27 in this model, and the mass loading ratio may be larger than this value if sulfur particles are smaller than those of sulfuric acid. The model suggests that the extinction coefficient of sulfuric acid particles with radius 3.7 micrometers (mode 3) is equal to 0.3/km in the middle cloud layer. The downward flux of CO is equal to 1.7 x 10(exp 12)/sq cm/s in this model. Our second model, which is constrained to yield f(sub H2O) = 10 ppm at the lower cloud boundary, close to the value measured by the Magellan radiooccultations, predicts the position of this boundary to be at 46.5 km, which agrees with the Magellan data; f(sub H2O) (30 km) = 90 ppm, close to the data of Moroz et al. (1983) at this altitude; Phi(sub H2SO4) = 6.4 x 10(exp 12)/sq cm/s; and Phi(sub co) = 4.2 x 10(exp 12)/sq cm/s. The S/H2SO4 flux mass ratio is 1:18, and the extinction coefficient of the mode 3 sulfuric acid particles is equal to 0.9 km in the middle cloud layer. A strong gradient of the H2SO4 vapor mixing ratio near the bottom of the cloud layer drives a large upward flux of H2SO4, which condenses and forms the excessive downward flux of liquid sulfuric acid, which is larger by a factor of 4-7 than the flux in the middle cloud layer. This is the mechanism of formation of the lower cloud layer. Variations of the lower cloud layer are discussed. Our modeling of the OCS and CO profiles in the lower atmosphere measured by Pollack et al. (1993) provides a reasonable explanation of these data and shows that the rate coefficient of the reaction SO3 + CO yields CO2 + SO2 is equal to 10(exp -11) exp(-(13,100 +/- 1000)/T) cc/s. The main channel of the reaction between SO3 and OCS is CO2 + (SO)2, and its rate coefficient is equal to 10(exp -11) exp(-(8900 +/- 500)/T) cc/s. In the conditions of Venus' lower atmosphere, (SO)2 is removed by the reaction (SO)2 + OCS yields CO + S2 + SO2. The model predicts an OCS mixing ratio of 28 ppm near the surface.
- Subjects :
- Astrophysics
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 00191035
- Volume :
- 109
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- NASA Technical Reports
- Journal :
- Icarus
- Notes :
- RTOP 889-62-01, , RTOP 154-10-80-01
- Publication Type :
- Report
- Accession number :
- edsnas.19950045609
- Document Type :
- Report
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1006/icar.1994.1077