Anomalous bright spot on the night side of Venus

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  • #629640
    Paul G. Abel
    Participant

    Hi all,

    On the 18th April, Anthony Wesley and Philip Miles imaged an anomoloas bright spot and linear feature on the night side of Venus, you can see their observation here: http://www.acquerra.au/astro/gallery/venus/index.live?dir=/venus&image=20250418-193800

    In their IR image it looks like there is a bright hot spot in the far north and the associated streak seems to be trailing the bright spot. In the image (which has north up) the spot will be slowly moving towards the terminator and one possible explanation might be that this is an eruptive event of some sort for which the linear feature may be hot gasses associated with it.

    Obviously we require more observations as soon as possible to see how the spot evolves over the coming days- the window to image the nightside of Venus is rapidly closing so observations are urgently required. Can I please ask all those with IR imaging equipment to image the night side of the planet as soon as possible and send me your observations as quickly as you can?

    I would like to thank Anthony and Phil for contacting me about this and commincating their observations in a timely fashion.

    Best wishes,
    -Paul

    #629649
    Robin Leadbeater
    Participant

    If it is gas from an eruption it will be interesting to see if it turns into a dark (absorption) feature in UV images once it reaches the sunlit area

    Robin

    #629650
    Martin Lewis
    Participant

    Hi Paul,
    Unfortunately, as you know this is a really poor morning apparition for Northern hemisphere imagers of Venus coming after the excellent evening apparition in February. I think all the decent images are going probably going to come from Wesley and Miles, who seem to be having a very good run. Having said that, the day after that image was taken I believe they were cloud affected

    Bright streaks are commonly seen in night-side images taken with large aperture scopes in good condition but this is one of brightest that has been imaged and the fact there is a bright spot within the streak makes it particularly intruiging.

    For anyone interested in imaging the night-side of Venus there is a disucssion forum which exists to promote the imaging of Venus and the night-side in particular at: https://groups.io/g/VenusImaging

    Martin

    #629663
    Paul G. Abel
    Participant

    Thanks Robin and Martin. Yes the altitude is very difficult- David Boyd has asked if any spectroscopists in the southern hemisphere may be able to help. Thanks for posting the link Martin.

    Cheers,
    -Paul

    #630250
    Steve Knight
    Participant

    Very interesting to read Paul’s report in the latest Journal. It reminded me of the cover of a Patrick Moore SF book that I took out of the library when I was an excitable 10 year old. The illustration is by David Hardy.

    Attachments:
    #630255

    An excellent cover! As I recall, those books all had a common plot: either the explorers were trapped in a cave (at least they were on Mars or the Moon) or they ran out of oxygen (normally more than once).

    The latest feature seems to be objective, for the reason Martin stated. It is a challenging matter not only from a technical perspective, but because of the very short observing window every few years, and by the very slow rotation of the planet.

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