Infrared Image of Low Clouds on Venus |
Original Caption Released with Image:
This false-color image is a near-infrared map of
lower-level clouds on the night side of Venus, obtained by the Near
Infrared Mapping Spectrometer aboard the Galileo spacecraft as it
approached the planets night side on February 10, 1990. Bright slivers of
sunlit high clouds are visible above and below the dark, glowing
hemisphere. The spacecraft is about 100,000 kilometers (60,000 miles)
above the planet. An infrared wavelength of 2.3 microns (about three times
the longest wavelength visible to the human eye) was used. The map shows
the turbulent, cloudy middle atmosphere some 50-55 kilometers (30-33
miles) above the surface, 10-16 kilometers or 6-10 miles below the visible
cloudtops. The red color represents the radiant heat from the lower
atmosphere (about 400 degrees Fahrenheit) shining through the sulfuric
acid clouds, which appear as much as 10 times darker than the bright gaps
between clouds. This cloud layer is at about -30 degrees Fahrenheit, at a
pressure about 1/2 Earths surface atmospheric pressure. Near the equator,
the clouds appear fluffy and blocky; farther north, they are stretched out
into East-West filaments by winds estimated at more than 150 mph, while
the poles are capped by thick clouds at this altitude.
Return to SSI Education and Public Outreach Homepage
Galileo Solid State Imaging Team Leader: Dr. Michael J. S. Belton
The SSI Education and Public Outreach webpages were originally created and
managed by Matthew Fishburn and Elizabeth Alvarez with significant assistance
from Kelly Bender, Ross Beyer, Detrick Branston, Stephanie Lyons, Eileen Ryan,
and Nalin Samarasinha.
Last updated: September 17, 1999, by Matthew Fishburn
Return to
Project Galileo Homepage
Website Curator: Leslie Lowes
Website Feedback: Ron Baalke