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Investigation of Venus Surface PropertiesStrong localized radar echoes have been observed at decimeter wavelengths from the highlands of Venus since the earliest radar maps were obtained over 30 years ago. These echoes are some five to ten times stronger than those from the presumably basaltic rocks seen at lower altitudes elsewhere on Venus. Observations of thermal emission from the visible disk of Venus at wavelengths corresponding to those used in the radar mapping confirm that the regions of high reflectivity also exhibit low emissivity, as expected from considerations of detailed thermodynamic balance. Two possibilities have been put forward to explain this unexpected aspect of the Venus highlands: 1) surface materials of high effective dielectric constant, probably associated with finite electrical conductivity, and 2) volume scattering associated with multiple scattering from a layer of very-low-loss material containing voids and extending down a few hundred wavelengths beneath the surface. Analogs to these two mechanisms are found elsewhere in the solar system, and each is capable of explaining the basic observations. as of the early 1990's. In 1993, however, it became possible to carry out a bistatic observation of the anomalous highland regions using the Magellan spacecraft, then in orbit about Venus. In this experiment the on-board telemetry transmitter was aimed at the planet's surface with its linear S-band polarization vector oriented at 45 deg to the spacecraft-Venus-Earth scattering plane. The pointing of the transmitting antenna was adjusted so that the spacecraft-to-illuminated-surface incidence angle equalled the Earth-to-Venus-surface incidence angle. In this way, the experiment emphasized the specular scattering component. A full Stokes-Vector analysis of the reflected signal as received on Earth was carried out as the illuminated region scanned across the highland regions of Venus. From the observed position angle of the echo, it was possible to calculate the Fresnel reflectivity of a number of regions on Venus, including the high-altitude Maxwell Montes, and to show unequivocally that the complex dielectric constant of that anomalous area was 100 +/- 50i, as compared to 4.0 (real) for the typical lowland area. Thus this experiment was able to rule out definitively an hypothesis of volume scattering as the explanation for the anomalous scattering in the Venus highlands.
Document ID
20020087578
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Contractor or Grantee Report
Authors
Ford, Peter G.
(Massachusetts Inst. of Tech. Cambridge, MA United States)
Date Acquired
August 20, 2013
Publication Date
September 18, 2002
Subject Category
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAG5-4047
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAGW-4351
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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