JpGU-AGU Joint Meeting 2020

Presentation information

[E] Oral

P (Space and Planetary Sciences ) » P-PS Planetary Sciences

[P-PS06] Science of Venus: Venus Express, Akatsuki, and beyond

convener:Takehiko Satoh(Institute of Space and Astronautical Science, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency), Kevin McGouldrick(University of Colorado Boulder), Hideo Sagawa(Kyoto Sangyo University), Thomas Widemann(Observatoire De Paris)

[PPS06-12] Variability of UV albedo and its relation to the wind field revealed by Akatsuki UVI

*Tatsuro Iwanaka1, Takeshi Imamura1, Yeon Joo Lee2, Takeshi Horinouchi3 (1.The Univesity of Tokyo, 2.Technical University of Berlin, 3.Hokkaido University)

Venus is entirely covered by optically thick clouds that play essential roles in the Venus' climate system. The cloud consists of H2SO4 aerosols, and H2SO4 is produced from SO2 photochemically. SO2 is abundant in the lower part of the cloud layer and in the subcloud region (Bertaux, 1996), and is thought to be transported to the cloud top in the sulfur cycle (Mills et al., 2007), although the dynamical processes responsible for the transport are not well understood. The purpose of our study is to confirm that SO2 is supplied from the lower atmosphere to the cloud top where it is lost via photochemical reactions and to analyze how the stationary planetary-scale circulation and time-varying disturbances contribute to the SO2 transport. The horizontal divergence calculated from the cloud-tracked wind (Ikegawa & Horinouchi, 2016, Horinouchi et al., 2017 and Horinouchi et al., 2018) is considered as an index of vertical flow. The 283-nm radiance, which is subject to SO2 absorption, measured by Akatsuki UVI (Yamazaki et al., 2018) was converted to UV albedo following the method of Lee et al. (2015) and Lee et al. (2017), and the albedo is considered to be anti-correlated with the amount of SO2. By comparing the Lagrangian derivative of UV albedo with the horizontal divergence, the relation between the changes of cloud-top SO2 and the vertical flow was obtained for independent air parcels and the mean field. The results suggest that the supply of SO2 by the solar-fixed mean flow is attributed to thermal tides and that the amount of SO2 also responses to transient, localized ascending flows.