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Unexpected detail in first-ever Venus south pole images
 
13 April 2006

Composite, false-colour view of Venus south pole captured by VIR
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 HI-RES JPEG (Size: 248 kb)  HI-RES TIFF (Size: 289 kb)
This false-colour composite, built with images taken by the Visible and Infrared Thermal Imaging Spectrometer (VIRTIS) onboard Venus Express, is one of the first-ever views of the southern hemisphere of Venus. The images were taken on 12 April 2006 from a distance of 206 452 kilometres, as the spacecraft passed below the planet in an elliptical arc.

The dark vortex shown almost directly over the South pole is a previously suspected but until now unconfirmed structure that corresponds to a similar cloud structure over the North pole.

The VIRTIS composite image shows Venus’s day side at left and night side at right, and corresponds to a scale of 50 kilometres per pixel.

The more spectacular night half, shown in reddish false colour, was taken via an IR filter at a wavelength of 1.7 microns, and chiefly shows dynamic spiral cloud structures in the lower atmosphere, around 55 kilometres altitude. The darker regions correspond to thicker cloud cover, while the brighter regions correspond to thinner cloud cover, allowing hot thermal radiation from lower down to be imaged.

Credits: ESA/INAF-IASF, Rome, Italy, and Observatoire de Paris, France

 
 
False-colour view imaged in ultraviolet of Venus south pole
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 HI-RES JPEG (Size: 551 kb)
This false-colour ultraviolet view is one of the first-ever images of the southern hemisphere of Venus, showing the day and night sides over the South pole. It was taken on 12 April 2006 by the Venus Monitoring Camera (VMC) onboard Venus Express, as the spacecraft passed below the planet in an elliptical arc. The image was taken from a distance of 206 452 km.

Credits: ESA/Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research
 
 
View imaged in ultraviolet of Venus south pole captured by VMC 1
Download:
 HI-RES JPEG (Size: 677 kb)
This ultraviolet view is one of the first-ever images of the southern hemisphere of Venus. It was taken on 12 April 2006 by the Venus Monitoring Camera (VMC) onboard Venus Express, as the spacecraft passed below the planet in an elliptical arc.

The image shows Venus’s day side at left and night side at right. The planet is seen from a distance of 206 452 kilometres and at a scale of 150 kilometres per pixel.

Credits: ESA/MPS, Katlenburg-Lindau, Germany

 
 
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