The South Polar Vortex of Venus
"Venus pretty much pushes the envelope on every aspect of rocky-planet existence. And now here's one more thing that made scientists do a double-take: a shape-shifting vortex swirling around Venus' south pole!"
Universe Today Download time: Apr 15 2011 8:18 AM ET
Our neighboring planet Venus really is a world of extremes; searing surface temperatures, crushing air pressure, sulfuric acid clouds…Venus pretty much pushes the envelope on every aspect of rocky-planet existence. And now here's one more thing that made scientists do a double-take: a shape-shifting vortex swirling around Venus' south pole!
The presence of a cyclonic storm around Venus' poles – both north and south – has been known since Mariner 10?s pass in 1974 and then afterwards during the Pioneer Venus mission when a downwardly-spiraling formation of clouds over the planet's north pole was imaged in infrared. It wasn't until ESA's Venus Express orbiter arrived in 2006 that the cyclone at the south pole was directly observed via the Visible and Infrared Thermal Imaging Spectrometer (VIRTIS) instrument…and it proved to be much stranger than anything previously expected.…
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