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The loss of ions from Venus through the plasma wake

  • S. Barabash*
  • , A. Fedorov
  • , J. J. Sauvaud
  • , R. Lundin
  • , C. T. Russell
  • , Y. Futaana
  • , T. L. Zhang
  • , H. Andersson
  • , K. Brinkfeldt
  • , A. Grigoriev
  • , M. Holmström
  • , M. Yamauchi
  • , K. Asamura
  • , W. Baumjohann
  • , H. Lammer
  • , A. J. Coates
  • , D. O. Kataria
  • , D. R. Linder
  • , C. C. Curtis
  • , K. C. Hsieh
  • B. R. Sandel, M. Grande, H. Gunell, H. E.J. Koskinen, E. Kallio, P. Riihelä, T. Säles, W. Schmidt, J. Kozyra, N. Krupp, M. Fränz, J. Woch, J. Luhmann, S. McKenna-Lawlor, C. Mazelle, J. J. Thocaven, S. Orsini, R. Cerulli-Irelli, M. Mura, M. Milillo, M. Maggi, E. Roelof, P. Brandt, K. Szego, J. D. Winningham, R. A. Frahm, J. Scherrer, J. R. Sharber, P. Wurz, P. Bochsler
*Corresponding author for this work
  • Swedish Institute of Space Physics
  • Université de Toulouse
  • University of California at Los Angeles
  • Austrian Academy of Sciences
  • JAXA Institute of Space and Astronautical Science
  • University College London
  • University of Arizona
  • Aberystwyth University
  • West Virginia University
  • University of Helsinki
  • Finnish Meteorological Institute
  • University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
  • Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research
  • University of California at Berkeley
  • Maynooth University
  • National Institute for Astrophysics
  • Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory
  • Wigner Research Centre for Physics
  • Southwest Research Institute
  • University of Bern

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Venus, unlike Earth, is an extremely dry planet although both began with similar masses, distances from the Sun, and presumably water inventories. The high deuterium-to-hydrogen ratio in the venusian atmosphere relative to Earth's also indicates that the atmosphere has undergone significantly different evolution over the age of the Solar System. Present-day thermal escape is low for all atmospheric species. However, hydrogen can escape by means of collisions with hot atoms from ionospheric photochemistry, and although the bulk of O and O2 are gravitationally bound, heavy ions have been observed to escape through interaction with the solar wind. Nevertheless, their relative rates of escape, spatial distribution, and composition could not be determined from these previous measurements. Here we report Venus Express measurements showing that the dominant escaping ions are O+, He+ and H+. The escaping ions leave Venus through the plasma sheet (a central portion of the plasma wake) and in a boundary layer of the induced magnetosphere. The escape rate ratios are Q(H+)/Q(O+) = 1.9; Q(He +)/Q(O+) = 0.07. The first of these implies that the escape of H+ and O+, together with the estimated escape of neutral hydrogen and oxygen, currently takes place near the stoichometric ratio corresponding to water.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)650-653
Number of pages4
JournalNature
Volume450
Issue number7170
DOIs
StatePublished - 29 Nov 2007
Externally publishedYes

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