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Decadal variations in a Venus general circulation model
Authors:Helen F Parish  Gerald Schubert  Richard L Walterscheid  Sebastien Lebonnois
Institution:a Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics, University of California, 603 Charles E. Young Dr. East, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1567, United States
b Department of Earth and Space Sciences, Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics, University of California, 595 Charles E. Young Dr. East, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1567, United States
c Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, CA 94550, United States
d The Aerospace Corporation, PO Box 92957, Los Angeles, CA 90009, United States
e Retired from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, CA 94550, United States
f Laboratoire de Meteorologie Dynamique, CNRS, 75252 Paris, cedex 05, France
Abstract:The Community Atmosphere Model (CAM), a 3-dimensional Earth-based climate model, has been modified to simulate the dynamics of the Venus atmosphere. The most current finite volume version of CAM is used with Earth-related processes removed, parameters appropriate for Venus introduced, and some basic physics approximations adopted. A simplified Newtonian cooling approximation has been used for the radiation scheme. We use a high resolution (1° by 1° in latitude and longitude) to take account of small-scale dynamical processes that might be important on Venus. A Rayleigh friction approach is used at the lower boundary to represent surface drag, and a similar approach is implemented in the uppermost few model levels providing a ‘sponge layer’ to prevent wave reflection from the upper boundary. The simulations generate superrotation with wind velocities comparable to those measured in the Venus atmosphere by probes and around 50-60% of those measured by cloud tracking. At cloud heights and above the atmosphere is always superrotating with mid-latitude zonal jets that wax and wane on an approximate 10 year cycle. However, below the clouds, the zonal winds vary periodically on a decadal timescale between superrotation and subrotation. Both subrotating and superrotating mid-latitude jets are found in the approximate 40-60 km altitude range. The growth and decay of the sub-cloud level jets also occur on the decadal timescale. Though subrotating zonal winds are found below the clouds, the total angular momentum of the atmosphere is always in the sense of superrotation. The global relative angular momentum of the atmosphere oscillates with an amplitude of about 5% on the approximate 10 year timescale. Symmetric instability in the near surface equatorial atmosphere might be the source of the decadal oscillation in the atmospheric state. Analyses of angular momentum transport show that all the jets are built up by poleward transport by a meridional circulation while angular momentum is redistributed to lower latitudes primarily by transient eddies. Possible changes in the structure of Venus’ cloud level mid-latitude jets measured by Mariner 10, Pioneer Venus, and Venus Express suggest that a cyclic variation similar to that found in the model might occur in the real Venus atmosphere, although no subrotating winds below the cloud level have been observed to date. Venus’ atmosphere must be observed over multi-year timescales and below the clouds if we are to understand its dynamics.
Keywords:Venus  Venus  Atmosphere  Atmospheres  Dynamics
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