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1.
We study the propagation of gravity waves in the martian atmosphere using a linearized one-dimensional full-wave model. Calculations are carried out for atmospheric parameters characteristic of Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter (on Mars Global Surveyor MGS) observations of apparent gravity waves in high latitude clouds and MGS radio occultation measurements of temperature variations with height suggestive of gravity wave activity. Waves that reach the thermosphere produce fluctuations in density comparable in amplitude with the density variations detected in Mars Odyssey aerobraking data. Gravity waves of modest amplitude are found to deposit momentum and generate significant heating and cooling in the martian atmosphere. The largest heating and cooling effects occur in the thermosphere, at altitudes between about 130 and 150 km, with heating occurring at the lower altitudes and cooling taking place above.  相似文献   

2.
《Icarus》1986,67(3):484-514
Most of the solar energy absorbed by Venus is deposited in the atmosphere, at levels more than 60 km above the surface. This unusual flux distribution should have important consequences for the thermal structure and dynamical state of that atmosphere. Because there are few measurements of the solar flux at levels above 60 km, a radiative transfer model was used to derive the structure and amplitude of the solar fluxes and heating rates in the Venus mesosphere (60–100 km). This model accounts for all sources of extinction known to be important there, including absorption and scattering by CO2, H2O, SO2, H2SO4 aerosols and an unidentified UV absorber. The distributions of these substances in our model atmosphere were constrained by a broad range of spacecraft and ground-based observations. Above the cloud tops, (71 km), near-infrared CO2 bands absorb enough sunlight to produce globally averaged heating rates ranging from 4° K/day (24-hr period) at 71 km to more than 50° K/day at 100 km. The sulfuric acid aerosols that compose the Venus clouds are primarily scattering agents at solar wavelengths. These aerosols reflect about 75% of the incident solar flux before it can be absorbed by the atmosphere or surface. The unknown substance that causes the observed cloud-top ultraviolet contrasts is responsible for most of the absorption of sunlight within the upper cloud deck (57.5−71 km). This substance absorbs almost half of the sunlight deposited on Venus and contributes to solar heating rates as large as 6° K/day at levels near 65 km. With the exception of CO2, all of the important sources of solar extinction have concentrations that vary with position, and, in general, these concentrations are not well known. To determine the sensitivity of the model results to these uncertainties, the concentrations of these opacity sources were varied in the model atmosphere and solar fluxes were computed for each case. These tests indicate that CO2 dominates the solar absorption at levels above the cloud tops and that heating rates are relatively insensitive to the distribution of other sources of extinction there. Within the upper cloud deck, uncertainties in the distribution of the UV absorber and the H2SO4 aerosols can produce heating rate errors as large as 50% at some levels. Diurnally averaged solar heating rates for the nominal opacity distribution were computed as a function of latitude at altitudes between 55 and 100 km, where most of the solar flux is deposited. The zonal wavenumber 1 (diurnal) and zonal wavenumber 2 (semidiurnal) components of the diurnally varying solar heating rates were also computed in this domain. These results should be sufficiently reliable for use in numerical dynamical models of the Venus atmosphere.  相似文献   

3.
Atmospheric ozone number densities have been determined over the altitude range 30–75 km by measuring the absorption of lunar u.v. radiation in a number of wavelength bands between 2400 Å and 2900 Å. The measurements were made from rockets fired at night at times close to full Moon and show significant variations in ozone densities particularly at the higher altitudes. Comparison with other observations indicates that above 60 km the ozone densities at night are markedly greater than they are during the day.  相似文献   

4.
It is shown in the paper that the mechanism of superrotation of the atmosphere of Venus consists of several interrelated processes, including the transport of angular momentum from the solid planet to the atmosphere at a wind flow over the planet’s surface relief, the upward transport of momentum by threedimensional turbulent vortices, the inverse energy cascade in a large-scale quasi-two-dimensional flow, and the horizontal transfer of angular momentum in the Hadley cell. These processes make different contributions to the superrotation at different altitudes.  相似文献   

5.
We study the thermal fields over Olympus Mons separating seasons (northern spring and summer against southern spring and summer) and local time observations (day side versus night side). Temperature vertical profiles retrieved from Planetary Fourier Spectrometer on board Mars Express (PFS-MEX) data have been used. In many orbits (running north to south along a meridian) passing over the top of the volcano there is evidence of a hot air on top of the volcano, of two enhancement of the air temperature both north and south of it and in between a collar of air that is colder than nearby at low altitudes, and warmer than nearby at high altitudes. Mapping together many orbits passing over or near the volcano we find that the hot air has the tendency to form an hot ring around it. This hot structure occurs mostly between LT = 10.00 and 15.00 and during the northern summer. Distance of the hot structure from the top of the volcano is about 600 km (10° of latitude). The hot atmospheric region is 300-420 km (5-7°) wide. Hot ring temperature contrasts of about 40 K occur at 2 km above the surface and decrease to 20 K at 5 km and to 10 K at 10 km. The atmospheric circulation over an area of 40° × 40° (latitudes and longitudes) is affected by the topography and the presence of Olympus Mons (−133°W, 18°N). We discuss also the thermal stability of the atmosphere over the selected area using the potential temperatures. The temperature field over the top of the volcano shows unstable atmosphere within 10 km from the surface. Finally, we interpret the hot temperatures around volcano as an adiabatic compression of down-welling branch coming from over the top of volcano.Different air temperature profiles are observed in the same seasons during the night, or in different seasons. In northern spring-summer during the night the isothermal contours do not show the presence of the volcano until we reach close to the surface very much, where a thermal inversion is observed. The surface temperature shows higher values (by 10 K) in correspondence of the scarp (an abrupt altimetry variation of roughly 5 km) on south (6°N) and north (30°N) sides of volcano. During the southern spring-summer, on the contrary the isothermal curves run parallel to the surface even on top the volcano, just like the GCM have predicted.  相似文献   

6.
The Community Atmosphere Model (CAM), a 3-dimensional Earth-based climate model, has been modified to simulate the dynamics of the Venus atmosphere. The most current finite volume version of CAM is used with Earth-related processes removed, parameters appropriate for Venus introduced, and some basic physics approximations adopted. A simplified Newtonian cooling approximation has been used for the radiation scheme. We use a high resolution (1° by 1° in latitude and longitude) to take account of small-scale dynamical processes that might be important on Venus. A Rayleigh friction approach is used at the lower boundary to represent surface drag, and a similar approach is implemented in the uppermost few model levels providing a ‘sponge layer’ to prevent wave reflection from the upper boundary. The simulations generate superrotation with wind velocities comparable to those measured in the Venus atmosphere by probes and around 50-60% of those measured by cloud tracking. At cloud heights and above the atmosphere is always superrotating with mid-latitude zonal jets that wax and wane on an approximate 10 year cycle. However, below the clouds, the zonal winds vary periodically on a decadal timescale between superrotation and subrotation. Both subrotating and superrotating mid-latitude jets are found in the approximate 40-60 km altitude range. The growth and decay of the sub-cloud level jets also occur on the decadal timescale. Though subrotating zonal winds are found below the clouds, the total angular momentum of the atmosphere is always in the sense of superrotation. The global relative angular momentum of the atmosphere oscillates with an amplitude of about 5% on the approximate 10 year timescale. Symmetric instability in the near surface equatorial atmosphere might be the source of the decadal oscillation in the atmospheric state. Analyses of angular momentum transport show that all the jets are built up by poleward transport by a meridional circulation while angular momentum is redistributed to lower latitudes primarily by transient eddies. Possible changes in the structure of Venus’ cloud level mid-latitude jets measured by Mariner 10, Pioneer Venus, and Venus Express suggest that a cyclic variation similar to that found in the model might occur in the real Venus atmosphere, although no subrotating winds below the cloud level have been observed to date. Venus’ atmosphere must be observed over multi-year timescales and below the clouds if we are to understand its dynamics.  相似文献   

7.
Stephen D. Eckermann  Jun Ma 《Icarus》2011,211(1):429-442
Using a Curtis-matrix model of 15 μm CO2 radiative cooling rates for the martian atmosphere, we have computed vertical scale-dependent IR radiative damping rates from 0 to 200 km altitude over a broad band of vertical wavenumbers ∣m∣ = 2π(1-500 km)−1 for representative meteorological conditions at 40°N and average levels of solar activity and dust loading. In the middle atmosphere, infrared (IR) radiative damping rates increase with decreasing vertical scale and peak in excess of 30 days−1 at ∼50-80 km altitude, before gradually transitioning to scale-independent rates above ∼100 km due to breakdown of local thermodynamic equilibrium. We incorporate these computed IR radiative damping rates into a linear anelastic gravity-wave model to assess the impact of IR radiative damping, relative to wave breaking and molecular viscosity, in the dissipation of gravity-wave momentum flux. The model results indicate that IR radiative damping is the dominant process in dissipating gravity-wave momentum fluxes at ∼0-50 km altitude, and is the dominant process at all altitudes for gravity waves with vertical wavelengths ?10-15 km. Wave breaking becomes dominant at higher altitudes only for “fast” waves of short horizontal and long vertical wavelengths. Molecular viscosity plays a negligible role in overall momentum flux deposition. Our results provide compelling evidence that IR radiative damping is a major, and often dominant physical process controlling the dissipation of gravity-wave momentum fluxes on Mars, and therefore should be incorporated into future parameterizations of gravity-wave drag within Mars GCMs. Lookup tables for doing so, based on the current computations, are provided.  相似文献   

8.
The Auguste experiment onboard the Phobos spacecraft was devoted to solar occultation spectroscopy of the Martian atmosphere in the ultraviolet through infrared wavelength region. Despite the short duration of the space mission and problems associated largely with a fault in the solar pointing system, data have been obtained on the chemical composition and aerosol content in the atmosphere of Mars at sunset early in the summer at equatorial latitudes (in the northern hemisphere). This paper presents a somewhat detailed review of the experiment performed, the data obtained, and their interpretation, and compares these data with new results. Ozone traces were detected at altitudes of 40–60 km, and, in one case, an ozone profile was obtained. Nine profiles of water vapor content at altitudes between 12 and 50 km were obtained from absorption data in the 1.87-m band. At altitudes of 23–25 km, the mean H2O concentration profile falls steeply to the value of 3 ppm, but at lower altitudes the relative H2O content is approximately constant (130 ppm). The overall content of water vapor is estimated as 8.3+2.5 -1.5 m of settled water. The temperature profile for the saturated atmosphere yields a cooling rate of 2 ± 1 K/km at altitudes from 25 to 35 km. The atmospheric extinction profiles were measured at altitudes from 10 to 50 km at the wavelengths 1.9 and 3.7 m. The atmosphere is transparent up to 25–33 km; below this level radiation is attenuated by dust; it is also possible that a layer of water ice clouds is present at altitudes of 20–25 km. High-altitude transparent ( 0.03) clouds consisting supposedly of water ice were observed in 5 of 38 cases at altitudes z 50 km. The optical depth 0 of the atmosphere was estimated to be 0.2 ± 0.1, and constraints on the form of the size distribution of dust particles were established. Spectral features in the 3.7 m range have been previously attributed to formaldehyde; its content is substantially higher than the limits deduced from new ground-based observations. The spectrum in the 3.7 m range is discussed and other unsettled problems are pointed out.  相似文献   

9.
The recent measurements of the vertical distribution and optical properties of haze aerosols as well as of the absorption coefficients for methane at long paths and cold temperatures by the Huygens entry probe of Titan permit the computation of the solar heating rate on Titan with greater certainty than heretofore. We use the haze model derived from the Descent Imager/Spectral Radiometer (DISR) instrument on the Huygens probe [Tomasko, M.G., Doose, L., Engel, S., Dafoe, L.E., West, R., Lemmon, M., Karkoschka, E., See, C., 2008a. A model of Titan's aerosols based on measurements made inside the atmosphere. Planet. Space Sci., this issue, doi:10.1016/j.pss.2007.11.019] to evaluate the variation in solar heating rate with altitude and solar zenith angle in Titan's atmosphere. We find the disk-averaged solar energy deposition profile to be in remarkably good agreement with earlier estimates using very different aerosol distributions and optical properties. We also evaluated the radiative cooling rate using measurements of the thermal emission spectrum by the Cassini Composite Infrared Spectrometer (CIRS) around the latitude of the Huygens site. The thermal flux was calculated as a function of altitude using temperature, gas, and haze profiles derived from Huygens and Cassini/CIRS data. We find that the cooling rate profile is in good agreement with the solar heating profile averaged over the planet if the haze structure is assumed the same at all latitudes. We also computed the solar energy deposition profile at the 10°S latitude of the probe-landing site averaged over one Titan day. We find that some 80% of the sunlight that strikes the top of the atmosphere at this latitude is absorbed in all, with 60% of the incident solar energy absorbed below 150 km, 40% below 80 km, and 11% at the surface at the time of the Huygens landing near the beginning of summer in the southern hemisphere. We compare the radiative cooling rate with the solar heating rate near the Huygens landing site averaging over all longitudes. At this location, we find that the solar heating rate exceeds the radiative cooling rate by a maximum of 0.5 K/Titan day near 120 km altitude and decreases strongly above and below this altitude. Since there is no evidence that the temperature structure at this latitude is changing, the general circulation must redistribute this heat to higher latitudes.  相似文献   

10.
The interpretation of unexpected characteristics of Pioneer Venus temperature measurements, and of the large difference between these and the Venera results, is aided by new Venus temperature profiles derived from engineering measurements of the Pioneer Venus Small-Probe Net Flux Radiometer (SNFR) instruments. To facilitate correction of a temperature-dependent radiometric response, these instruments monitored the temperatures of their deployed radiation detectors. The accurate calibration of the temperature sensors, and their strong thermal coupling to the atmosphere, make it possible to deduce atmospheric temperatures within 2°K (at most altitudes) using a simple two-component thermal model to account for lag effects. These independent temperature profiles generally confirm to high accuracy, the small-probe results of A. Seiff, D. B. Kirk, R. E. Young, R. C. Blanchard, J. T. Findlay, G. M. Kelly, and S. C. Sommer (1980a, J. Geophys. Res.85, pp. 7903–7933) concerning vertical structure and horizontal contrast in the lower atmosphere, although the stable layer below 25 km is found to be slightly more stable (by about 0.4°K/km) and absolute temperatures are an average of 2°K higher. The measured Day-Night thermal contrast is compatible with predicted responses to the diurnal variation in solar heating, except near the cloud base, where 3–5°K differences may be due to thermal radiative heating differences associated with different cloud opacities. Temperature contrasts between latitudes 30 and 60° are roughly consistent with cyclostrophic balance. But pressure and temperature measurements by the Pioneer Venus Sounder probe at 4° latitude, when compared to Small-probe results, imply unreasonably large equatorward accelerations of 100 (m/sec)/day. Poleward accelerations compatible with cyclostrophic balance can be obtained if Sounder-probe temperatures are increased by a scale-factor correction reaching 6–7°K at 13 km.  相似文献   

11.
W.J. Borucki  R.C. Whitten  E. Barth 《Icarus》2006,181(2):527-544
The electrical conductivity and electrical charge on the aerosols in atmosphere of Titan are computed for altitudes between 0 and 400 km. Ionization of methane and nitrogen due to galactic cosmic rays (GCR) is important at night where these ions are converted to ion clusters such as CH+5CH4, C7H+7, C4H+7, and H4C7N+. The ubiquitous aerosols observed also play an important role in determining the charge distribution in the atmosphere. Because polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are expected in Titan's atmosphere and have been observed in the laboratory and found to be electrophilic, we consider the formation of negative ions. During the night, the very smallest molecular complexes accept free electrons to form negative ions. This results in a large reduction of the electron abundance both in the region between 150 and 350 km over that predicted when such aerosols are not considered. During the day time, ionization by photoemission from aerosols irradiated by solar ultraviolet (UV) radiation overwhelms the GCR-produced ionization. The presence of hydrocarbon and nitrile minor constituents substantially reduces the UV flux in the wavelength band from the cutoff of CH4 at 155 to 200 nm. These aerosols have such a low ionization potential that the bulk of the solar radiation at longer wavelengths is energetic enough to produce a photoionization rate sufficient to create an ionosphere even without galactic cosmic ray (GCR) bombardment. At altitudes below 60 km, the electron and positive ion abundances are influenced by the three-body recombination of ions and electrons. The addition of this reaction significantly reduces the predicted electron abundance over that previously predicted. Our calculations for the dayside show that the peaks of the charge distributions move to larger values as the altitude increases. This variation is the result of the increased UV flux present at the highest altitudes. Clearly, the situation is quite different than that for the night where the peak of the distribution for a particular size is nearly constant with altitude when negative ions are not present. The presence of very small aerosol particles (embryos) may cause the peak of the distribution to decrease from about 8 negative charges to as little as one negative charge or even zero charge. This dependence on altitude will require models of the aerosol formation to change their algorithms to better represent the effect of charged aerosols as a function of altitude. In particular, the charge state will be much higher than previously predicted and it will not be constant with altitude during the day time. Charging of aerosol particles, whether on the dayside or nightside, has a major influence on both the electron abundance and electrical conductivity. The predicted conductivities are within the measurement range of the HASI PWA instrument over most but not all, of the altitude range sampled.  相似文献   

12.
The following physical parameters have been computed for the Jovian atmosphere between 270 and ?300 km: (1) Pressure, (2) Density, (3) Speed and sound, (4) Number density, (5) Density scale. It has considered that the top of the clouds is at 0 km. For the calculations of these parameters we have used:
  1. for the altitudes 270-0 km data from Voyager I and II.
  2. for the altitudes ?300–0 km data from Voyager II and spectroscopic observations.
  相似文献   

13.
The dramatic growth and evolution of the 2001 martian global dust storm were captured using the Submillimeter Wave Astronomy Satellite (SWAS). While the lower and middle atmosphere (pressures greater than 50 μbar, up to ∼45 km altitude) showed rapid heating of up to 40 K, the average surface brightness temperature plummeted by ∼20 K at the peak of the storm. The storm appears to have had little impact on the global temperature structure at altitudes above ∼ 10 μbar (∼ 60 km).  相似文献   

14.
《Planetary and Space Science》1999,47(10-11):1347-1354
Cosmic ray radiation is the main mechanism for ionizing the lower atmosphere of Titan. Their higher penetration power, in comparison with solar photons, allows cosmic rays to penetrate deep into the atmosphere of Titan, ionizing the neutral molecules and generating an ionosphere with an electron density peak, placed at around 90 km, similar in magnitude to the ionospheric peak produced by solar radiation in the upper atmosphere. In the lower atmosphere, the electron density profile, in the absence of a magnetic field, depends mainly on the modulation of cosmic rays by the solar wind and on the nature of the ionizable particles. We present here the first results of a new numerical model developed to calculate the concentration of electrons and most abundant ions in the Titan lower atmosphere. The present knowledge of Titan’s atmosphere permits us to include new neutral and ionic species, such as oxygen derivates, in a more detailed ion-chemistry calculation than previous lower ionospheric models of Titan. The electron density peaks at 90 km with a magnitude of 2150 cm−3. The ion distribution obtained predicts that cluster cations and hydrocarbon cations are the most abundant ions below and above the electron density peak, respectively. We also discuss the effect of solar activity at the distance of the Saturn orbit on the spectrum of the cosmic particles. We obtain that from solar minimum to solar maximum the ionization rate at the energy deposition peak changes by a factor of 1.2 at 70 km, and by a factor of 2.6 at altitudes as high as 400 km. The electron density at the concentration peak changes by a factor of 1.1 at 90 km, and by a factor of 1.6 at 400 km.  相似文献   

15.
《Icarus》1986,66(2):380-396
A series of experiments with a three dimensional general circulation model developed to simulate Earth's atmosphere is run with planetary rotation rates varying between 1 and 1/64 times Earth's rotation rate and diurnally averaged thermal forcing. Results are used to evaluate theories of Venus' atmospheric superrotation which invoke upward transport of angular momentum from the solid planet by the zonal mean (i.e., axisymmetric) circulation. The theories predict that superrotation is a common feature of slowly rotating planetary atmospheres, suggesting that superrotation should appear in the idealized slowly rotating cases of the present study. We find, however, that although dynamical mechanisms suggested for axisymmetric forcing of superrotation appear in model spinups from rest, the steady-state circulations include only weak globally averaged superrotation, consistent with previously reported results from lower resolution models. It appears that during spinup the thermally driven equator-to-pole circulation rapidly generates zonal-mean winds near the planetary surface which preclude vertical angular momentum transport and thus suppress further development of the superrotation. If this is the case, then the diurnally varying component of solar heating, such as atmospheric tides or the “moving flame”, must be included to explain Venus' strong atmospheric superrotation.  相似文献   

16.
A. Seiff 《Icarus》1982,51(3):574-592
The state properties observed by Pioneer Venus experiments in Venus' mesosphere and thermosphere impose constraints on the dynamics at those altitudes and, in fact, suggest a very vigorous dynamics, by virtue of the extremely large day-night pressure contrasts. At both the morning and evening terminators, these are directed to accelerate the flow from the day hemisphere to the night, and are thus consistent with subsolar to antisolar circulation, possibly somewhat unsymmetrical. There is a major vertical contraction of the atmosphere above 100 km as it crosses the terminators, associated with the nightside cooling. Flow across both terminators is thus descending, but at rather gentle angles (~0.003 rad), and there is a consequent downward transport of composition from the dayside to the nightside. The pressure differences and gravitational acceleration in the descending flow are sufficient to generate supersonic speeds in the flow crossing the terminator in the absence of viscosity. However, the equation of continuity cannot be satisfied with such high velocities, given the measured state properties. This is interpreted to be evidence for strong viscous deceleration and dissipation at the 110 to 120-km level, and possibly extending above 120 km. The viscosity required is that of turbulent motion, rather than laminar. It is noteworthy that the basic dynamic models of Dickinson and Ridley are for laminar viscosity. With moderate flow velocities approaching the terminator (~65 m/sec), as measured by A.L. Betz et al. (1977, Proceedings, Symposium on Planetary Atmospheres, pp. 29–33), and for an essentially unaccelerated flow crossing the terminator in the presence of viscous dissipation, as indicated by the continuity equation applied to the data, the observed nightside cooling below 140 km was found to be approximately that given by the 15-μm CO2 band radiative cooling model of R.E. Dickinson (1976, Icarus27, 479–493). This may be an indirect indication that the velocities are indeed low (i.e., less than 100 m/sec) in the subsolar-antisolar circulation, and are kept low by viscous forces. Calculations based on R.E. Dickinson and E.C. Ridley's equations (1977, Icarus30, 163–178) indicate that the radiative cooling continues into the nightside at a level sufficient to approximate the observed cooling zone width. Above 140 km, where CO2 becomes a minor constituent, another cooling mechanism is needed. It is suggested that this could be vertical diffusion with long mean free path, accompanied by exchange of thermal for potential energy. This could become important on the nightside above 140 km, where the mean free path λ ~ 0.5 km, and λg/cp ~ 5°K. Below 100 km, pressures depend primarily on latitude, which, on the basis of similar conditions in the deeper atmosphere, suggests zonal flow in cyclostrophic balance. Under this assumption, pressure differences between 30 and 60° latitude indicate a peak zonal velocity of ~130 m/sec at the cloud tops. The veocity decreases above this level toward zero near 90 km. The wind profile from the north and night probes is generally similar to that obtained earlier from north-day probe pressure differences. The pressure data thus suggest the existence of two dynamical regimes, a primarily subsolar-antisolar regime above 100 km, and a cyclostrophically balanced zonal regime below 100 km, which is an upward continuation of the circulation regime of the atmosphere below the clouds.  相似文献   

17.
Evaluations are presented of the time-average heating at different latitudes and heights due to energy flux divergence of the equinox diurnal and semidiurnal tides calculated by Forbes (1982a,h)from 0 to 400 km.It is found that diurnal tidal heating maximizes in the region of 80 km and semidiurnal has a sharp maximum at 108 km. Thermospheric diurnal oscillations give rise to a second region of heating that maximizes at 200 km and effectively transports energy from low to high latitudes.Global means are evaluated for the time-averaged vertical energy fluxes and heating rates: below 130 km, the results for the diurnal tide agree with those for the (1,1) mode alone, and for the semidiurnal tide, heating rates below 130 km are the same as those that would he obtained without the thermospheric semidiurnal excitation.Comparisons are made from 90 to 170 km between the combined diurnal and semidiurnal heating rates and previously reported rates due to e.u.v. radiation, Sq currents and gravity waves.  相似文献   

18.
Possible interrelationships of different observations have been studied to clear up some obvious inconsistencies and develop a coherent picture of the kinematics of the Venus atmosphere. There is a wind shear in the vicinity of 60 km with vertical dimensions on the order of a scale height. The kinematical model has negligible surface winds, speeds increasing with altitude to approximately 45 km, a layer of high-speed retrograde zonal winds extending from approximately 45 to 60 km, a wind shear between 60 and 65 km, and slow atmospheric motions above this. Spacecraft data show that the region of high-speed winds is thicker on the day side of the planet than on the night side.  相似文献   

19.
Based on the measurements performed from 2007 to 2015 at the summit of Mount Shatdzhatmaz adjacent to the 2.5-m telescope at the Caucasus Observatory of the SAI MSU, we have determined the statistical characteristics of basic meteorological parameters: the ambient air temperature, the ground wind speed, and the relative humidity. The stability of these parameters over the entire period of our measurements and their variations within an annual cycle have been studied. The median temperature on clear nights is +3.2°C, although there are nights with a temperature below ?15°C. The typical ground wind speed is 3 m s?1; the probability of a wind stronger than 10 m s?1 does not exceed 2%. The losses of observing time due to high humidity are maximal in the summer period but, on the whole, are small over a year, less than 10%. We have estimated the absolute water vapor content in the atmosphere, which is especially important for infrared observations. Minimum precipitablewater vapor is observed in December–February; the median value over these months is 5 mm. We additionally provide the wind speeds at various altitudes above the ground (from 1 to 16 km) that we obtained when measuring the optical turbulence. We present the results and technique of our measurements of the annual amount of clear night astronomical time, which is, on average, 1320 h, i.e., 45% of the possible one at the latitude of the observatory. The period from mid-September to mid-March accounts for about 70% of the clear time. A maximum of clear skies is observed in November, when its fraction reaches 60% of the possible astronomical night time.  相似文献   

20.
The processes of the solar radiation extinction in deep layers of the Venus atmosphere in a wavelength range from 0.44 to 0.66 µm have been considered. The spectra of the solar radiation scattered in the atmosphere of Venus at various altitudes above the planetary surface measured by the Venera-11 entry probe in December 1978 are used as observational data. The problem of the data analysis is solved by selecting an atmospheric model; the discrete-ordinate method is applied in calculations. For the altitude interval from 2–10 km to 36 km, the altitude and spectral dependencies of the volume coefficient of true absorption have been obtained. At altitudes of 3–19 km, the spectral dependence is close to the wavelength dependence of the absorption cross section of S3 molecules, whence it follows that the mixing ratio of this sulfur allotrope increases with altitude from 0.03 to 0.1 ppbv.__________Translated from Astronomicheskii Vestnik, Vol. 39, No. 4, 2005, pp. 304–320.Original Russian Text Copyright © 2005 by Maiorov, Ignat’ev, Moroz, Zasova, Moshkin, Khatuntsev, Ekonomov.  相似文献   

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