4.5 Article

Potential vorticity of the south polar vortex of Venus

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-PLANETS
Volume 121, Issue 4, Pages 574-593

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2015JE004885

Keywords

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Funding

  1. ASI [I/050/10/0]
  2. Spanish project [AYA2012-36666]
  3. FEDER
  4. Grupos Gobierno Vasco [IT-765-13]
  5. Universidad Pais Vasco UPV/EHU [UFI11/55]

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Venus' atmosphere shows highly variable warm vortices over both of the planet's poles. The nature of the mechanism behind their formation and properties is still unknown. Potential vorticity is a conserved quantity when advective processes dominate over friction and diabatic heating and is a quantity frequently used to model balanced flows. As a step toward understanding the vortices' dynamics, we present maps of Ertel's potential vorticity (EPV) at Venus' south polar region. We analyze three configurations of the south polar vortex at the upper cloud level (P similar to 240 mbar; z similar to 58 km), based on our previous analyses of cloud motions and thermal structure from data acquired by the Visual and InfraRed Thermal Imaging Spectrometer instrument on board Venus Express. Additionally, we tentatively estimate EPV at the lower cloud level (P similar to 2200 mbar; z similar to 43km), based on our previous wind measurements and on static stability data from Pioneer Venus and the Venus International Reference Atmosphere (VIRA) model. Values of EPV are on the order of 10(-6) and 10(-8) Km(2) kg(-1) s(-1) at the upper and lower cloud levels, respectively, being 3 times larger than the estimated errors. The morphology observed in EPV maps is mainly determined by the structures of the vertical component of the relative vorticity. This is in contrast to the vortex's morphology observed in 3.8 or 5 mu m images which are related to the thermal structure of the atmosphere at the cloud top. Some of the EPV maps point to a weak ringed structure in the upper cloud, while a more homogenous EPV field is found in the lower cloud.

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