Thermal Structure and Energy Influx to the Day- and Nightside Venus Ionosphere

Pioneer Venus in situ measurements made with the retarding potential analyzer reveal strong variations in the nightside ionospheric plasma density from location to location in some orbits and from orbit to orbit. The ionopause is evident at night as a relatively abrupt decrease in the thermal plasma...

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Veröffentlicht in:Science (American Association for the Advancement of Science) 1979-07, Vol.205 (4401), p.105-107
Hauptverfasser: Knudsen, W. C., Spenner, K., Whitten, R. C., Spreiter, J. R., Miller, K. L., Novak, V.
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container_end_page 107
container_issue 4401
container_start_page 105
container_title Science (American Association for the Advancement of Science)
container_volume 205
creator Knudsen, W. C.
Spenner, K.
Whitten, R. C.
Spreiter, J. R.
Miller, K. L.
Novak, V.
description Pioneer Venus in situ measurements made with the retarding potential analyzer reveal strong variations in the nightside ionospheric plasma density from location to location in some orbits and from orbit to orbit. The ionopause is evident at night as a relatively abrupt decrease in the thermal plasma concentration from a few hundred to ten or fewer ions per cubic centimeter. The nightside ion and electron temperatures above an altitude of 250 kilometers, within the ionosphere and away from the terminator, are comparable in magnitude and have a value at the ionopause of approximately 8000 K. The electron temperature increases from a few tens of thousands of degrees Kelvin just outside the ionopause to several hundreds of thousands of degrees Kelvin further into the shocked solar wind. The coldest ion temperatures measured at an altitude of about 145 kilometers are 140 to 150 K and are still evidently above the neutral temperature. Preliminary day- and nightside model ion and electron temperature height profiles are compared with measured profiles. To raise the model ion temperature to the measured ion temperature on both day- and nightsides, it was necessary to include an ion energy source of the order of 4 × 10$^{-3}$ erg per square centimeter per second, presumably Joule heating. The heat flux through the electron gas from the solar wind into the neutral atmosphere averaged over day and night may be as large as 0.05 erg per square centimeter per second. Integrated over the planet surface, this heat flux represents one-tenth of the solar wind energy expended in drag on the sunward ionopause hemisphere.
doi_str_mv 10.1126/science.205.4401.105
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The electron temperature increases from a few tens of thousands of degrees Kelvin just outside the ionopause to several hundreds of thousands of degrees Kelvin further into the shocked solar wind. The coldest ion temperatures measured at an altitude of about 145 kilometers are 140 to 150 K and are still evidently above the neutral temperature. Preliminary day- and nightside model ion and electron temperature height profiles are compared with measured profiles. To raise the model ion temperature to the measured ion temperature on both day- and nightsides, it was necessary to include an ion energy source of the order of 4 × 10$^{-3}$ erg per square centimeter per second, presumably Joule heating. The heat flux through the electron gas from the solar wind into the neutral atmosphere averaged over day and night may be as large as 0.05 erg per square centimeter per second. 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1095-9203
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recordid cdi_proquest_miscellaneous_733195158
source JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; American Association for the Advancement of Science
subjects Altitude
Atmosphere
Electron energy
Electron gas
Electrons
Ion temperature
Ionopause
Ionosphere
Ionospheres
Ions
Observations
Orbits
Solar wind
Space probes
Venus (Planet)
Venusian atmosphere
title Thermal Structure and Energy Influx to the Day- and Nightside Venus Ionosphere
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