DPS 2001 meeting, November 2001
Session 4. Worlds Inside 1 AU
Oral, Chairs: M. Drake, A. Hendrix, Tuesday, November 27, 2001, 11:10am-12:30pm, Regency GH

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[4.08] The Hot Atom Coronae of Venus and Mars: Current Understanding and Challenges

L. J. Paxton, R. J. Vervack, Jr. (The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory)

The exospheres of Venus and Mars are very different in composition and extent as well as the amount of interaction they experience with the solar wind. In this paper, we discuss new results from the analysis of Pioneer Venus Orbiter Ultraviolet Spectrometer data taken over more than a solar cycle. These observations, in particular those in the atomic oxygen solar resonance line at 130.4 nm, show the response of the planetary ionosphere to changing levels of solar flux and the degree to which the exosphere varies in density. We also report a new analysis of data from the ultraviolet spectrometers on the Mariner Mars missions: these data are nearly thirty years old. We report the detection of a hot oxygen corona here as well. We will summarize the differences between the two exospheres and what we still may learn from another aeronomical mission to Mars or Venus.


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