
Copernical Team
Six-wavelength spectroscopy can offer new details of surface of Venus

A trio of papers provide new insight into the composition and evolution of the surface of Venus, hidden beneath its caustic, high temperature atmosphere. Utilizing imaging from orbit using multiple wavelengths—six-band spectroscopy proposed as part of the VERITAS and EnVision missions—scientists can map the iron content of the Venusian surface and construct the first-ever geologic map.
"Previous missions have only imaged one wavelength, and used 30-year-old topographic data to correct the spectra. Moreover, they were based on theoretical ideas about what Venus spectra look like, at very high temperatures. So the prior data have all been fairly qualitative," said M. Darby Dyar, a Senior Scientist at the Planetary Science Institute and author on three recent papers on the topic.
These papers are based on new data from the Planetary Spectroscopy Laboratory at German Aerospace Center Institute of Planetary Research in Berlin, where Dyar works with a team including Jörn Helbert, first author of "Deriving iron contents from past and future Venus surface spectra with new high-temperature laboratory emissivity data" that appears today in Science Advances.
Week in images: 11 - 15 January 2021

Week in images: 11 - 15 January 2021
Discover our week through the lens
Earth from Space: Tanezrouft

In this week's edition of the Earth from Space programme, the Copernicus Sentinel-2 mission takes us over the Tanezrouft Basin – one of the most desolate parts of the Sahara Desert.
See also Tanezrouft Basin to download the image.
Tanezrouft Basin

ESA kids app now available

ESA kids app now available
Lockheed Martin-Built Orion spacecraft is ready for its Moon mission

Mobility without particulates

SpaceX CRS-21 safely splashes down off the coast of Florida for first time

Muscles, metals, bubbles and rotifers - a month of European science in space

Glenn's Power Systems Facility has supported Station research for decades
