Chandra captures Venus in a whole new light
Scientists have captured the first X-ray view of Venus using NASA's
Chandra X-ray Observatory. The observations provide new information
about the atmosphere of Venus and open a new window for examining Earth's
sister planet.
Venus in X-rays looks similar to Venus in visible light, but there
are important differences. The optically visible Venus is due to the
reflection of sunlight and, for the relative positions of Venus, Earth
and Sun during these observations, shows a uniform half-crescent that
is brightest toward the middle. The X-ray Venus is slightly less than
a half-crescent and brighter on the limbs.
The differences are due to the processes by which Venus shines in visible
and X-ray light. The X-rays from Venus are produced by fluorescence,
rather than reflection. Solar X-rays bombard the atmosphere of Venus,
knock electrons out of the inner parts of the atoms, and excite the
atoms to a higher energy level. The atoms almost immediately return
to their lower energy state with the emission of a fluorescent X-ray.
A similar process involving ultraviolet light produces the visible light
from fluorescent lamps.
For Venus, most of the fluorescent X-rays come from oxygen and carbon
atoms between 120 and 140 kilometers (74 to 87 miles) above the planet's
surface. In contrast, the optical light is reflected from clouds at
a height of 50 to 70 kilometers (31 to 43 miles). As a result, Venus'
Sun-lit hemisphere appears surrounded by an almost-transparent luminous
shell in X-rays. Venus looks brightest at the limb since more luminous
material is there.
"This opens up the exciting possibility of using X-ray observations
to study regions of the atmosphere of Venus that are difficult to investigate
by other means," said Konrad Dennerl of the Max Planck Institute
for Extraterrestrial Physics in Garching, Germany, leader of an international
team of scientists that conducted the research.
The Chandra observation of Venus was also a technological tour de force.
The angular separation of Venus from the Sun, as seen from Earth, never
exceeds 48 degrees. This relative proximity has prevented star trackers
and cameras on other X-ray astronomy satellites from locking onto guide
stars and pointing steadily in the direction of Venus to perform such
an observation.
Venus was observed on Jan. 10, 2001, with the Advanced CCD Imaging
Spectrometer (ACIS) detector plus the Low Energy Transmission Grating
and on Jan. 13, 2001, with the ACIS alone. Other members of the team
were Vadim Burwitz and Jakob Engelhauser, Max Planck Institute; Carey
Lisse, University of Maryland, College Park; and Scott Wolk, Harvard-Smithsonian
Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, Mass. These Results were presented
at this week's "New Visions of X-ray Universe in the XMM-Newton
and Chandra Era" symposium in Noordwijk, Netherlands.
The Low Energy Transmission Grating was built by the Space Research
Organization of the Netherlands and the Max Planck Institute, and the
ACIS instrument was developed for NASA by The Pennsylvania State University,
University Park, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT),
Cambridge. NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala.,
manages the Chandra program. The Smithsonian's Chandra X-ray Center
controls science and flight operations from Cambridge, Mass.
More information on Chandra and images associated with this release
are available on the Internet at: