Categories: esaVenus

A Varying Venusian Vortex

Animation of Venus' southern polar vortex made from VIRTIS thermal infrared images; white is cooler clouds at higher altitudes.

Our neighboring planet Venus really is a world of extremes; searing surface temperatures, crushing air pressure, sulfuric acid clouds…Venus pretty much pushes the envelope on every aspect of rocky-planet existence. And now here’s one more thing that made scientists do a double-take: a shape-shifting vortex swirling around Venus’ south pole!

The presence of a cyclonic storm around Venus’ poles – both north and south –  has been known since Mariner 10’s pass in 1974 and then afterwards during the Pioneer Venus mission when a downwardly-spiraling formation of clouds over the planet’s north pole was imaged in infrared. It wasn’t until ESA’s Venus Express orbiter arrived in 2006 that the cyclone at the south pole was directly observed via the Visible and Infrared Thermal Imaging Spectrometer (VIRTIS) instrument…and it proved to be much stranger than anything previously expected.

“Our results highlight the importance of the polar region in the global dynamics of the Venus atmosphere.

– David Luz, Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics at the University of Lisbon, Portugal

Rather than rotating centrally around the geographical pole – like Saturn’s southern vortex does – Venus’ vortex rotates around a varying point averaging several degrees of latitude away. Its shape is inconsistent too…sometimes it is S-shaped, other times it is a double-eyed figure-eight, and yet other times it becomes completely irregular. These changes in form happen rapidly over 24-hour periods, a result of the powerful wind shears created by varying speeds and alternating directions of the wind streams around Venus’ polar latitudes.

Venus’ atmosphere typically rotates in a retrograde (east to west) direction at much higher speeds than the planet itself rotates. But near the poles, the wind speeds slow and change direction to prograde (west to east), which creates zones of wind shear. This in turn affects the movement and morphology of the vortex.

Results such as these show how interesting Venus is to study and how important it is to study other worlds. They enable us to compare the processes that take place on Venus, a planet with a thick atmosphere, with those on our Earth.

– ESA Venus Express Project Scientist Håkan Svedhem

And this is all just in regards to just the southern vortex…Venus’s northern vortex may prove to be just as unusual, but since Venus Express’ orbit takes it close to the north pole it’s impossible to get a wide-angle look there. Investigation of that region will have to “wait until further missions”, according to project scientist Håkan Svedhem.

Currently funded until at least 2014, Venus Express will have more opportunities to study the structure of the southern vortex, giving scientists more info on the curious nature of our neighboring planet’s surprising and dynamic atmosphere.

The results of this study are published online in Science Express on 7 April 2011. Other authors of the paper were: by D.L. Berry of the University of Évora, Portugal; G. Piccioni and R. Politi of INAF-IASF Rome, Italy; P. Drossart and S. Erard from Observatoire de Paris, France; C.F. Wilson of Oxford University, United Kingdom; and F. Nuccilli from INAF-IFSI Rome, Italy.

For more in-depth sciencey info read the Science Express article posted April 7, 2011.

Animation credit: ESA/VIRTIS-VenusX/INAF-IASF/LESIA-Obs. de Paris (G. Piccioni, INAF-IASF)

Jason Major

A graphic designer in Rhode Island, Jason writes about space exploration on his blog Lights In The Dark, Discovery News, and, of course, here on Universe Today. Ad astra!

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