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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2021-07-03
    Description: We mapped the distribution of the 365‐nm albedo of the Venus atmosphere over the years 2006–2014, using images acquired by the Venus Monitoring Camera (VMC) on board Venus Express. We selected all images with a global view of Venus to investigate how the albedo depends on longitude. Bertaux et al. (2016, https://doi.org/10.1002/2015JE004958) reported a peak in albedo around 100° longitude and speculated on an association with the Aphrodite Terra mountains. We show that this peak is most likely an artifact, resulting from long‐term albedo variations coupled with considerable temporal gaps in data sampling over longitude. We also used a subset of images to investigate how the albedo depends on local time, selecting only south pole viewing images of the dayside (local times 7–17 hr). Akatsuki observed mountain‐induced waves in the late afternoon at 283 nm and 10 μm (Fukuhara et al., 2017, https://doi.org/10.1038/ngeo2873). We expect that the presence of such waves may introduce 365‐nm albedo variations with a periodicity of one solar day (116.75 Earth days). We searched for such a periodicity peak at 15:30–16:00 local time and low latitudes but did not find it. In conclusion, we find that temporal albedo variations, both short and long term, dominate any systematic variations with longitude and local time. The nature of VMC dayside observations limits regular data sampling along longitudes, so longitudinal variations, if they exist, are difficult to extract. We conclude that any influence by the Venus surface on 365‐nm albedo is negligible within this data set.
    Description: Plain Language Summary: Recently, it was reported that mountains on the surface of Venus can affect the atmosphere at the altitude of the cloud tops (70 km). For example, the brightness of the clouds (albedo) in images made by the Venus Express spacecraft at ultraviolet wavelengths (365 nm) was suspected to peak over a high mountain, Aphrodite Terra. We searched for such surface effects using the Venus Express images taken at 365 nm over the years 2006–2014. We found that the albedo was strongly variable over this period and that different longitudes were systematically imaged at different times. It is therefore not possible to uncover the influence of mountains on the albedo, and we believe that the reported albedo peak near Aphrodite Terra is most likely not real. Another spacecraft, Akatsuki, observed global‐scale atmospheric waves in the late afternoon that are originated by mountains. We also searched for albedo changes at the same latitude with a period of one solar day (116.75 Earth days) that might be linked with these atmospheric waves but did not find any period above the noise level. We conclude that the influence of mountains on the 365‐nm albedo is too weak to be recognized in Venus Express images.
    Description: Key Points: Temporal variations of the 365‐nm albedo of Venus dominate over any systematic variations along longitude or over local time. We found no systematic influence by mountains on the 365‐nm albedo distribution, in contrast to a previous report.
    Description: EU Horizon 2020 MSCA-IF
    Description: JAXA ITYF
    Description: JPSP International Research Fellow program
    Keywords: 523 ; Venus ; UV ; image analysis ; observations ; clouds
    Type: article
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2021-07-21
    Description: 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 SO2 abundance from the 283 nm phase curve. However, we cannot disentangle the absorption by SO2 and by the unknown absorber. Considering previous SO2 abundance measurements at midinfrared wavelengths, the required absorption coefficient of the unknown absorber at 283 nm must be more than twice that at 365 nm.
    Description: Plain Language Summary: There is an unknown absorber in the clouds of Venus. It absorbs solar energy effectively at ultraviolet (UV) and blue wavelengths, but its vertical location, either above or below the cloud top level (about 70 km altitude), remains unclear. This uncertainty affects our understanding of the vertical deposition of solar energy in the atmosphere. We investigate the vertical distribution of the unknown absorber using the dependence of the full‐disk brightness on the scattering direction (the Sun‐Venus‐spacecraft angle) at 365 nm, with data from JAXA's Akatsuki spacecraft over 3 years. We find that the unknown absorber could exist in the entire cloud, or as a thin layer near but below the cloud top. Using these constraints on the vertical distribution of the unknown absorber, we analyze the 283 nm full‐disk brightness. At this shorter wavelength, the SO2 gas and the unknown absorber are both effective absorbers. We attempt to quantify the SO2 abundance, and find that the brightness dependence on the scattering direction alone is insufficient to separate the contribution from the two absorbers at 283 nm. Further analysis with spectral phase curve observations will better define the SO2 abundance.
    Description: Key Points: The vertical distribution of the unknown absorber is investigated with the aid of full‐disk phase curves at wavelengths of 283 and 365 nm First time the 283 nm full‐disk brightness phase curve of Venus is analyzed over a broad phase angle range The unknown absorber must result in sufficient absorption within the cloud scale height immediately below the cloud top
    Description: EC, H2020, H2020 Priority Excellent Science, H2020 Marie Skłodowska‐Curie Actions (MSCA) http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100010665
    Keywords: 523 ; atmosphere ; phase curve ; simulation ; UV image ; Venus
    Type: article
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Applied physics 50 (1990), S. 55-59 
    ISSN: 1432-0649
    Keywords: 42.55.Gp ; 42.55.Rz
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Physics
    Notes: Abstract Nonlinear processes in UV optical materials were investigated by using 280-fs, 248-nm pulses. Nonlinear absorption in CaF2 was confirmed to be a two-photon process by using the luminescence of self-trapped excitons, which was also used for the single shot pulse width measurement. The absorption bands due to F centers were identified in CaF2, MgF2, and LiF after several hundred shots at 100 GW/cm2. Absorption at 248 nm was considerable especially in MgF2 and LiF. Self-focusing and self-phase modulation were observed in CaF2.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Applied physics 55 (1992), S. 323-326 
    ISSN: 1432-0649
    Keywords: 34.00 ; 42.55.Gp
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Physics
    Notes: Abstract The gas densities of two pulsed gas jets were measured together with spatial and temporal distributions by the XeF fluorescence induced by a KrF laser. The B-X and C-A transitions of XeF showed a biquadratic dependence on laser intensity when SF6 was used as the F donor instead of F2, and quadratic and cubic dependences on gas density, respectively.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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