| Literature DB >> 31983883 |
Atsushi Yamazaki1,2, Manabu Yamada3, Yeon Joo Lee1,4, Shigeto Watanabe5, Takeshi Horinouchi6, Shin-Ya Murakami1, Toru Kouyama7, Kazunori Ogohara8, Takeshi Imamura9, Takao M Sato1, Yukio Yamamoto1, Tetsuya Fukuhara10, Hiroki Ando11, Ko-Ichiro Sugiyama12, Seiko Takagi13,14, Hiroki Kashimura15, Shoko Ohtsuki16, Naru Hirata17, George L Hashimoto18, Makoto Suzuki1, Chikako Hirose1, Munetaka Ueno19, Takehiko Satoh1,20, Takumi Abe1,20, Nobuaki Ishii1, Masato Nakamura1.
Abstract
The ultraviolet imager (UVI) has been developed for the Akatsuki spacecraft (Venus Climate Orbiter mission). The UVI takes ultraviolet (UV) images of the solar radiation reflected by the Venusian clouds with narrow bandpass filters centered at the 283 and 365 nm wavelengths. There are absorption bands of SO2 and unknown absorbers in these wavelength regions. The UV images provide the spatial distribution of SO2 and the unknown absorber around cloud top altitudes. The images also allow us to understand the cloud top morphologies and haze properties. Nominal sequential images with 2-h intervals are used to understand the dynamics of the Venusian atmosphere by estimating the wind vectors at the cloud top altitude, as well as the mass transportation of UV absorbers. The UVI is equipped with off-axial catadioptric optics, two bandpass filters, a diffuser installed in a filter wheel moving with a step motor, and a high sensitivity charge-coupled device with UV coating. The UVI images have spatial resolutions ranging from 200 m to 86 km at sub-spacecraft points. The UVI has been kept in good condition during the extended interplanetary cruise by carefully designed operations that have maintained its temperature maintenance and avoided solar radiation damage. The images have signal-to-noise ratios of over 100 after onboard desmear processing.Entities:
Keywords: Initial results of cloud tracking; UV images of Venus at the cloud top altitude; UVI performance; Ultraviolet imager (UVI); Venus orbiter Akatsuki
Year: 2018 PMID: 31983883 PMCID: PMC6954016 DOI: 10.1186/s40623-017-0772-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Earth Planets Space ISSN: 1343-8832 Impact factor: 2.363
Fig. 1Photographs of UVI-S (left) and UVI-AE (right). The radiator for the CCD cooling is hiding under the baseplate of the instrument in the left panel
Fig. 2Schematic layout of UVI
Characteristics of UVI
| Observation target | Solar radiation scattered at cloud top |
| Optics design | Camera with off-axial catadioptric optics |
| Observational wavelength | 283 and 365 nm |
| Field-of-view | 12° |
| FOV per pixel | 0.20 mrads |
| Spatial resolution | ~ 200 m (periapsis)–76 km (60Rv) |
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| F-number | 16 |
| Focal length | 63.3 mm |
| Aperture size | 39.89 mm (hood entrance) |
| Bandpass widths of the filters | 14 nm |
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| CCD | SiCCD (back-illuminated and full-frame transfer) |
| Pixel number | 1024 × 1024 pixels |
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| Exposure time | 4 ms–11 s |
| Data depth | 12 bit |
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| UVI-S | 2.9 |
| UVI-AE | 1.2 |
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| UVI-S | 199 mm × 206 mm × 376 mm |
| UVI-AE | 220 mm × 220 mm × 50 mm |
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| Stand-by mode | 17 |
| FW movement mode | 34 |
| Observation mode | 19 |
Fig. 3a Transmittance of the interference filters for the 365- and 283-nm channels (circles and triangles) and b transmittance of diffuser
Fig. 4Temperature dependence of the CCD dark counts through the readout electronics
Fig. 5Raw flat image of the integrating sphere using the diffuser with no correction
Fig. 6Measured distortion pattern of UVI
Fig. 7SFR of the UVI imager
Fig. 8Time variation of calibration factor for the 365-nm channel
Calibration factor β at 365 and 283 nm (avg.)
| Date | 8 Oct. 2010 | 8 Feb. 2016 | 8-9 Sep. 2016 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1.63 ± 0.078 | 1.49 ± 0.24 | 1.58 ± 0.19 | |
| – | – | 1.94 ± 0.16 |
Fig. 9Examples of UVI 283-nm images (a, c) and 365-nm images (b, d)
Fig. 10Horizontal velocities derived from three 365-nm images on the day of Akatsuki’s Venus orbit insertion (7 December 2015). Arrows show their deviation from the uniform westward wind of 95 m/s. The length scale of the arrows is shown in m/s near the lower-right corner. Grayscale shading shows the high-passed radiance (W/m2/sr/m) at the beginning of cloud tracking