The VIRTIS Infrared Imaging Spectrometer on the ESA/Venus Express Mission

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Venus Express is an ESA mission scheduled for launch in November 2005. It will study the Venus atmosphere and environment during two Venusian days, starting in spring 2006, on an elliptical orbit (250-60,000 km). The VIRTIS (Visual and Infrared Thermal Imaging Spectrometer) instrument is adapted from the imaging spectrometer VIRTIS of the ESA/Rosetta cometary mission (Coradini et al., Planet. Space Sci., 1998). It consists in two channels:
1. An imaging Hoffner spectrometer (VIRTIS-M) working in combination in IR (1-5 μ m) and visible (0.25-1 μ m), providing spectral maps at 0.25 mrad spatial resolution and 300 spectral resolution.
2. An echelle slit spectrometer (VIRTIS-H) working in the IR (2-5 μ m), at higher (≈1500) spectral resolution, with a 0.5 mrad FOV coaligned with VIRTIS-M.
Following the Galileo/NIMS (Carlson et al., Science, 1991) and the Cassini/VIMS observations (Baines et al., Icarus, 2000) during their respective Venus encounters, the orbital observations by VIRTIS should provide an extended basis for Venus atmospheric investigation in the near infrared. The scientific objectives of VIRTIS range from surface detection in optical and near infrared windows in night side observations, to mesospheric sounding on day and night side. It will provide a tomography of the Venus atmosphere from 0 up to 110 km with:
- Surface and near-surface temperature variations - H2O in the 0-15 km region
- H2O, D/H, CO, OCS, SO2 measurements in the 26-45 km region
- Cloud opacity in the lower cloud layers (45-70 km)
- O2 fluorescence in the 95-110 km range
Various science objectives are accessible from these observations, including the large scale circulation in the lower atmosphere, the meteorology, the dynamics of the mesosphere, and a search for active volcanism through D/H, SO2 and CH4 observations.
This experiment is supported by CNES, ASI, DLR, and ESA

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