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Science 14 December 1973:
Vol. 182. no. 4117, pp. 1132 - 1135
DOI: 10.1126/science.182.4117.1132

Articles

Venus: Composition and Structure of the Visible Clouds

Ronald G. Prinn 1

1 Department of Meteorology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge 02139

It is proposed that the visible cloud deck on Venus is composed of droplets of sulfuric acid. These are formed by the very rapid photooxidation of carbonyl sulfide in the upper atmosphere. The clouds are best described as an extensive haze since the predicted particulate scale height probably exceeds the gas scale height within the layer. The predicted mixing ratio for water is 10-6 (lower limit), and for both carbonyl sulfide and sulfur dioxide it is 10-7 (upper limit); these are in good agreement with observations. Gaps in the layer are not possible unless the planetary scale dynamics produce cloud turnover times of less than a few days. Under these conditions the water mixing ratio could approach 10-4 and the formation of a thin hydrochloric acid haze at high altitude above the main cloud is possible.


THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES:
Catalytic Processes in the Atmospheres of Earth and Venus.
W. B. DeMore, W. B. DeMore, and Y. L. Yung (1982)
Science 217, 1209-1213
   Abstract »    PDF »
Venus: Halide Cloud Condensation and Volatile Element Inventories.
J. S. LEWIS and B. FEGLEY JR. (1982)
Science 216, 1223-1225
   Abstract »    PDF »
Venus Lower Atmospheric Composition: Analysis by Gas Chromatography.
V. I. OYAMA, G. C. CARLE, F. WOELLER, and J. B. POLLACK (1979)
Science 203, 802-805
   Abstract »    PDF »



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