Observations of the CO bulge on Venus and implications for mesospheric winds

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Atmospheric Composition, Carbon Monoxide, Mesosphere, Venus Atmosphere, Zonal Flow (Meteorology), Atmospheric Models, Interferometry, Mapping, Mixing Ratios, Nocturnal Variations, Spatial Distribution

Scientific paper

Observations of CO at 2.6 mm (115.27 GHz) were made with the Owens Valley Radio Observatory (OVRO) millimeter interferometer in 1986 and 1988, yielding high-quality disk-resolved spectra which were inverted to determine the CO mixing ratio profile from distinct regions on the disk, allowing us to map the distribution of CO in the upper mesosphere of Venus both horizontally and vertically. The 1986 observations were of the morning terminator and were particularly useful in searching for a suspected CO maximum ('bulge') on the nightside. The resulting CO mixing ratio profiles were mapped for various altitudes as functions of latitude and local time, and we report that we have resolved the previously inferred CO bulge. The bulge increases in magnitude from a small day-night variation at 90 km to an extensive nightside peak at 100 km, the upper limit of our observations. The peak bulge-to-dayside ratio approached 20-30 at 100 km in 1986 and may have been as large as 50-100, assuming late-afternoon CO abundances found in 1988 were similar to those in 1986. Three-dimensional mapping shows that in the upper mesosphere the bulge was displaced from local midnight toward the morning equator, centered at 3:30 AM local time. Using the qualitative model of mesospheric circulation on Venus proposed by Clancy and Muhleman (1985, 1991), we explain this shift in terms of strong retrograde zonal winds throughout the mesosphere, matching the directly detected mesospheric circulation (Shah, K., D. O. Muhleman, and G. L. Berge 1991) observed with the same dataset in 1988.

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