Venus (planet) - astronomy.
Publié le 11/05/2013
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level winds circle the planet at 360 km/h (225 mph), making a complete rotation in only four days.
These winds are said to super-rotate because they travel muchfaster than the rotation of the planet itself.
These high-speed winds cover the planet completely, blowing toward the west at virtually every latitude from equator topole.
The motions of descending probes, however, have shown that the bulk of Venus’s tremendously dense atmosphere, closer to the planet’s surface, is almoststagnant.
From the surface up to 10 km (6 mi) altitude, wind speeds are only about 3 to 18 km/h (2 to 11 mph).
The high-speed winds probably result from thetransfer of momentum from Venus’s slow-moving, massive lower atmosphere to higher altitudes where the atmosphere is less massive, so that the same momentumresults in a much higher velocity.
Data from the Venus Express and other space probes have revealed that a double vortex forms at both poles of Venus—two huge hurricane-like structures that rotatevery slowly side-by-side.
Sinking air at the poles may create the double spinning systems, which have a complex vertical structure that scientists are only beginning tounderstand.
The upper atmosphere and ionosphere were studied in great detail by Pioneer Venus 1 , which passed through them once each day.
On Earth this region is very hot; on Venus it is not, even though Venus is closer to the Sun.
Surprisingly, on the night side of Venus the upper atmosphere is extremely cold.
(Day-side temperatures are40°C/104°F, compared to night-side temperatures of -170°C/-274°F.) Scientists believe that strong winds blow from the day side toward the near vacuum that iscaused by the low temperatures on the night side.
Such winds would carry along light gases, such as hydrogen and helium, which are concentrated in a night-side“bulge.”
On Earth the ionosphere is isolated from the solar wind (a flow of charged particles from the Sun) by the magnetosphere, the magnetic envelope created by thedynamo effect of Earth’s rotating core.
Earth’s magnetosphere deflects charged particles from the Sun, although some particles can strike the atmosphere at the polesto create auroras.
Venus lacks a magnetic field of its own, but the solar wind seems to generate an induced magnetosphere around the planet by interacting with theionosphere.
This magnetosphere is similar to ones created around comets.
B Surface Features
Because Venus and Earth are so similar in size, they are sometimes called twin planets.
Venus is only slightly smaller and less dense than Earth.
Its radius is 6,052 km(3,760 mi) and its average density is 5.2 g/cm³.
The planet’s surface gravity is nine-tenths as strong as surface gravity on Earth; an object that weighs 10 kg on Earthwould weigh 9 kg on Venus.
It is clear from data collected by space probes, however, that the geological processes that shaped the surfaces of both planets are different.
Blocked by thick clouds,the surface features on Venus can only be studied by radar or by special infrared detectors.
The first maps of Venus were made by radar on Earth.
Curiously, theperiods of Venus’s orbit and rotation cause the same side of the planet to always face Earth when the two planets are closest.
At such times, the side facing Earth canbe viewed and mapped by Earth-based radar.
In contrast to the very large antenna needed for Earth-based radar mapping of Venus, a modest instrument on Pioneer Venus 1 was able to conduct a nearly globalsurvey.
Combined with data from the Soviet probes, the Magellan orbiter, and Earth-based radar, the survey shows that the surface of Venus is primarily a rolling plaininterrupted by two continent-sized highland areas, which have been named Ishtar Terra and Aphrodite Terra after two manifestations of the goddess Venus.
AphroditeTerra, although not as high as Ishtar Terra, extends nearly halfway around the equatorial region; it occupies the planet’s far side as viewed from Earth at closestapproach.
The more powerful radar aboard the Magellan spacecraft has revealed huge volcanoes, large solidified lava flows, and a large array of meteorite craters.
The largestimpact crater is almost 300 km (190 mi) across—the smallest about 5 km (3 mi).
Although the probe’s radar could resolve even smaller craters, if any were present,Venus’s dense atmosphere apparently prevents smaller meteorites from impacting the surface of the planet.
It is believed that all craters older than about 500 millionyears have been obliterated, while the more recent ones show little sign of modification.
The global survey and other probes have also revealed evidence that a great deal of tectonic activity has taken place on Venus, at least in the past.
Such evidenceincludes ridges, canyons, a troughlike depression that extends across 1,400 km (870 mi) of the surface, and a gigantic volcanic cone whose base is more than 700 km(435 mi) wide.
The Soviet probes sent back photographs of the areas in which they set down, and also measured the natural radioactivity of the rocks.
The radioactivityresembles that of granite and strongly suggests that the material of Venus is differentiated, or chemically separated, by volcanic activity.
Angular rocks that are visiblein the Soviet pictures also suggest the existence of geologic activity that would counteract the forces of erosion.
IV VENUS’S PAST
Because the size and density of Venus and Earth are so similar, scientists think the two planets originated in the same way.
Like Earth, Venus formed about 4.6 billionyears ago out of the spinning disk of dust and debris that surrounded the newborn Sun.
The materials accreted (clumped together) to form larger and larger objectscalled planetesimals, resulting in bodies with sizes between those of the Moon and Mars.
A number of these bodies with similar or intersecting orbits eventually collidedand merged to form both Venus and Earth at difference distances from the Sun.
The earliest history of Venus was probably very similar to that of Earth.
However, impacts from leftover Moon or Mars-size bodies in the inner solar system could havegiven Venus its odd, extremely slow, backward (clockwise) rotation.
One or more of these impacts may have created a moon or moons for Venus, much the same waythat our Moon is thought to have formed from a giant impact with Earth.
Some theories suggest that Venus’s ancient moon or moons eventually crashed back into theplanet, reversing its original faster counterclockwise rotation.
Scientists are not certain if Venus had large amounts water like Earth after it formed or if it has always been dry.
In the wet scenario, Venus may have had oceans andan atmosphere similar to the early Earth for millions of years.
Because it received more sunlight, Venus began to heat up, increasing the water vapor in theatmosphere.
Water vapor is an extremely efficient greenhouse gas.
The planet eventually suffered a runaway greenhouse effect that raised its surface temperature to apoint where the oceans boiled away entirely.
Ultraviolet light from the Sun then broke down the water vapor in the atmosphere into hydrogen and oxygen.
The lighthydrogen atoms escaped into space, carried off by the solar wind, while the oxygen atoms reacted with minerals in the crust.
With most of the water lost, carbondioxide could not combine with water to form carbonate rocks as it had on Earth.
The massive amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere added to the greenhouseeffect begun by the nearly vanished water vapor.
Studies of the impact craters on the surface have led some scientists to propose that the entire surface of the Venus melted and reformed in a planet-wide eruptionaround 500 million years ago—no older impact craters have been identified.
Such a global event may have happened a number of times during the history of Venus.Unlike the constant tectonic plate movement and volcanic activity that gradually reshapes Earth’s crust, Venus may undergo rare but catastrophic tectonic processesthat resurface the entire crust all at once.
V EXPLORATION.
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