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The so-called unknown absorber in the clouds of Venus is an important absorber of solar energy, but its vertical distribution remains poorly quantified. We analyze the 283 and 365-nm phase curves of the disk-integrated albedo measured by Akatsuki. Based on our models, we find that the unknown absorber can exist either well-mixed over the entire upper cloud or within a thin layer. The necessary condition to explain the 365-nm phase curve is that the unknown absorber must absorb efficiently within the cloud scale height immediately below the cloud top. Using this constraint, we attempt to extract the SO$_2$ abundance from the 283-nm phase curve. However we cannot disentangle the absorption by SO$_2$ and by the unknown absorber. Considering previous SO$_2$ abundance measurements at mid-infrared wavelengths, the required absorption coefficient of the unknown absorber at 283~nm must be more than twice that at 365~nm.
Japanese Venus Climate Orbiter/AKATSUKI was proposed in 2001 with strong support by international Venus science community and approved as an ISAS (The Institute of Space and Astronautical Science) mission soon after the proposal. The mission life we
We report Venus image observations around the two maximum elongations of the planet at June and October 2015. From these images we describe the global atmospheric dynamics and cloud morphology in the planet before the arrival of JAXA Akatsuki mission
One of the striking features about Venus atmosphere is its temporal variability and dynamics, with a chaotic polar vortex, large-scale atmospheric waves, sheared features, and variable winds that depend on local time and possibly orographic features.
One of the most intriguing, long-standing questions regarding Venus atmosphere is the origin and distribution of the unknown UV-absorber, responsible for the absorption band detected at the near-UV and blue range of Venus spectrum. In this work, we u
The Venusian atmosphere is in a state of superrotation where prevailing westward winds move much faster than the planets rotation. Venus is covered with thick clouds that extend from about 45 to 70 km altitude, but thermal radiation emitted from the