TY - JOUR
T1 - Deducing the Composition of Venus Cloud Particles with the Autofluorescence Nephelometer (AFN)
AU - Baumgardner, Darrel
AU - Fisher, Ted
AU - Newton, Roy
AU - Roden, Chris
AU - Zmarzly, Pat
AU - Seager, Sara
AU - Petkowski, Janusz J.
AU - Carr, Christopher E.
AU - Špaček, Jan
AU - Benner, Steven A.
AU - Tolbert, Margaret A.
AU - Jansen, Kevin
AU - Grinspoon, David H.
AU - Mandy, Christophe
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 by the authors.
PY - 2022/9
Y1 - 2022/9
N2 - The composition, sizes and shapes of particles in the clouds of Venus have previously been studied with a variety of in situ and remote sensor measurements. A number of major questions remain unresolved, however, motivating the development of an exploratory mission that will drop a small probe, instrumented with a single-particle autofluorescence nephelometer (AFN), into Venus’s atmosphere. The AFN is specifically designed to address uncertainties associated with the asphericity and complex refractive indices of cloud particles. The AFN projects a collimated, focused, linearly polarized, 440 nm wavelength laser beam through a window of the capsule into the airstream and measures the polarized components of some of the light that is scattered by individual particles that pass through the laser beam. The AFN also measures fluorescence from those particles that contain material that fluoresce when excited at a wavelength of 440 nm and emit at 470–520 nm. Fluorescence is expected from some organic molecules if present in the particles. AFN measurements during probe passage through the Venus clouds are intended to provide constraints on particle number concentration, size, shape, and composition. Hypothesized organics, if present in Venus aerosols, may be detected by the AFN as a precursor to precise identification via future missions. The AFN has been chosen as the primary science instrument for the upcoming Rocket Lab mission to Venus, to search for organic molecules in the cloud particles and constrain the particle composition.
AB - The composition, sizes and shapes of particles in the clouds of Venus have previously been studied with a variety of in situ and remote sensor measurements. A number of major questions remain unresolved, however, motivating the development of an exploratory mission that will drop a small probe, instrumented with a single-particle autofluorescence nephelometer (AFN), into Venus’s atmosphere. The AFN is specifically designed to address uncertainties associated with the asphericity and complex refractive indices of cloud particles. The AFN projects a collimated, focused, linearly polarized, 440 nm wavelength laser beam through a window of the capsule into the airstream and measures the polarized components of some of the light that is scattered by individual particles that pass through the laser beam. The AFN also measures fluorescence from those particles that contain material that fluoresce when excited at a wavelength of 440 nm and emit at 470–520 nm. Fluorescence is expected from some organic molecules if present in the particles. AFN measurements during probe passage through the Venus clouds are intended to provide constraints on particle number concentration, size, shape, and composition. Hypothesized organics, if present in Venus aerosols, may be detected by the AFN as a precursor to precise identification via future missions. The AFN has been chosen as the primary science instrument for the upcoming Rocket Lab mission to Venus, to search for organic molecules in the cloud particles and constrain the particle composition.
KW - Rocket Lab
KW - Venus cloud droplets
KW - autofluorescence nephelometer
KW - complex refractive index
KW - light scattering and fluorescence
KW - polarization
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85136157857
U2 - 10.3390/aerospace9090492
DO - 10.3390/aerospace9090492
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85136157857
SN - 2226-4310
VL - 9
JO - Aerospace
JF - Aerospace
IS - 9
M1 - 492
ER -