Venus’ S02 from recent or ancient volcanos?

By Xinhua

Beijing : Scientists are debating whether the sulfur dioxide found in the atmosphere of Venus is the product of relatively recent volcanic eruptions or lingers from eruptions as old as 10 million years.


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“Volcanoes are a key part of a climate system,” said Fred Taylor, a Venus Express scientist from Oxford University.

Sulfur compounds don’t stay long in Earth’s atmosphere because they eventually react with the planetary surface, but they may take longer to react with surface rocks on Venus.

Venus Express used spectroscopy to analyze how the Venusian atmosphere absorbs starlight and sunlight, which indicates the type of atoms and molecules in the atmosphere. The spacecraft watched as the sulfur dioxide in the upper atmosphere dropped by two-thirds over several days.

“I am very skeptical about the volcanic hypothesis,” said Jean-Loup Bertaux, a Venus Express principal investigator from the French Aeronomy Service. “However, I must admit that we don’t understand yet why there is so much SO2 [sulfur dioxide] at high altitudes, where it should be destroyed rapidly by solar light, and why it is varying so wildly.”

That dramatic change in sulfur dioxide levels was smaller in the lower atmosphere, where Venus Express gauged sulfur dioxide levels by how much infrared radiation that they absorbed. A stronger infrared signature seen by VIRTIS (Visible and Infrared Thermal Imaging Spectrometer) means more sulfur dioxide.

“With VIRTIS, we monitor sulfur dioxide at an altitude of 35-40 kilometers (21-24 miles), and we have seen no change larger than 40 percent on a global scale over the last two years,” said Giuseppe Piccioni, VIRTIS co-principal investigator in Rome.

Scientists hope they can confirm or disprove active volcanoes on Venus, either by looking for local plumes of gas rising from volcanoes or finding hot spots on the surface that suggest fresh lava flows.

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