Venus releases oxygen and carbon into space

Venus, unlike Earth, has no intrinsic magnetic field. As a result, the solar wind interacts directly with its atmosphere, accelerating charged particles that can escape into space. In situ measurements by space probes had already shown that these ions were mainly composed of oxygen and hydrogen. However, the mass resolution of the instruments used made it impossible to distinguish between carbon, nitrogen and oxygen.

In August 2021, the BepiColombo probe, on its way to Mercury, flew over Venus for the second and last time. On this occasion, the probe passed just under 550 km from the planet’s surface. A large number of onboard instruments were active during the flyby, gathering unique data on Venus’ environment. Among them, the MSA (Mass Spectrum Analyzer) ion mass spectrometer designed by CNRS Terre & Univers scientists – in collaboration with ISAS-JAXA, MPS Solar Sytem Research, and IDA, detected a stream of low-energy carbon and oxygen ions from Venus’ induced magnetosphere. These ions were located about 6 radii from the planet.

This discovery is important since it provides information on the composition and dynamics of Venus’ magnetosphere. Carbon and oxygen ions are probably expelled from Venus’ atmosphere by an ambipolar electric field generated by electrons escaping from the planet. This process is similar to that which produces the “polar wind” on Earth. MSA’s observations open up new perspectives for the study of Venus’ magnetosphere. They will enable scientists to learn more about the processes that control the evolution of planetary atmospheres, their magnetospheres and their interaction with the solar wind, both in our solar system and in extrasolar systems.

The illustration shows the X-YVSO plane with a cut at ZVSO = 0. The red segment shows the MSA observation sequence between 12:47 UT and 13:04 UT. The black arrows represent the MSA field of view, and the blue arrow reflects ions escaping at an angle of ~140° to the magnetic field lines (the angle is calculated using the MSA field of view). Unlike other observation sequences, during this time window, incoming ions were moving in the same direction as the MSA FOV. The open magnetic field lines were obtained using the LatHyS (Latmos Hybrid Simulation) global hybrid model, with input parameters (e.g. proton density, velocity, temperature and clock angle) constrained by Solar Orbiter observations in the upstream solar wind. The polar view of Venus was taken by the Venus Monitoring Camera (VMC) on board Venus Express. © Nature Astronomy, Hadid et al; LPP, CNRS; Venus: ESA/MPS

Further Resources

IRAP Contact

  • Nicolas André, nicolas.andre@irap.omp.eu
  • Christophe Verdeil, christophe.verdeil@irap.omp.eu
  • Moa Persson, moa.persson@irap.omp.eu
  • Andrei Fedorov, andrei.fedorov@irap.omp.eu

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