News on Venus
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- Explosions on Venus
- Could Venus be slowing down?
- Venus has an Ozone layer
- Wheather on Venus not so boring
- The amazing southern vortex of Venus
- Venus holds warning for Earth
- Was Venus once a habitable planet?
- Finally an explanation for Venus's superrotation
- Venus Express surfs venus's atmosphere
- Venus is still geologically active
- Mapping Venus
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Venus Express surfs venus's atmosphere
Thursday, 22 April 2010 09:30
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During five aerodrag measurements last week, Venus Express' solar arrays and control systems were operated as one big flying sensor, with the solar arrays rotated at various angles to the direction of flight. The special configuration exposed the wings to the vanishingly faint wisps of atmosphere that reach to the boundary of space around Venus, generating a tiny but measurable aerodynamic torque, or rotation, on the satellite. This torque can be measured very accurately based on the amount of correction that must be applied by reaction wheels, which counter-rotate inside the spacecraft to maintain its orientation in space. On the last day, 16 April, the solar arrays were rotated at plus and minus 45° to the atmospheric flow, mimicking the vanes of a windmill, in order to gather additional information on the behaviour of the molecules of the atmosphere bouncing off the solar wings.
A very capable satellite Camino explained that the mission operations team will study last week’s results to develop an optimised configuration for aerodrag campaigns in October and in 2011. Aerodrag testing was also conducted in 2008, 2009 and February 2010. The solar array on Venus Express comprise two symmetrical wings supporting gallium-arsenide solar cells. Their combined 5,7m2 can generate up to 1400 W of power in Venus-orbit. Source: ESA |




Venus Express has completed an 'aerodrag' campaign that used its solar wings as sails to catch faint wisps of the planet’s atmosphere. The test used the orbiter as an exquisitely accurate sensor to measure atmospheric density barely 180 km above the hot planet. 