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Satnews Daily
October 14th, 2008

Venus Express Looks for Black Specks of Other Universes


Venus Express In the process of circling Earth, Venus Express' task is to observe whether Earth is habitable, which is no joke, but rather an exercise. Venus Express is paving the way for an exciting new era in astronomy having taken its first image of Earth with its Visible and Infrared Thermal Imaging Spectrometer (VIRTIS) soon after its launch in November 2005. About a year after the spacecraft established itself in Venus's orbit, David Grinspoon, a Venus Express Interdisciplinary Scientist from the Denver Museum of Nature & Science, Colorado, suggested a program of sustained Earth observation.

"When the Earth is in a good position, we observe it two or three times per month," says Giuseppe Piccioni, Venus Express VIRTIS Co-Principal Investigator, at IASF-INAF, Rome, Italy. The instrument has now amassed approximately 40 images of Earth over the last two years. These images include both visible and near-infrared regions of the spectrum and can be split into spectra, in order to search for the signature of molecules in the Earth's atmosphere.

Venus Express in Orbit The value of the images lies in the fact that Earth spans less than a pixel in Venus Express's cameras. In other words, it appears as a single dot with no visible surface details. This situation is something that astronomers expect to soon face in their quest for Earth-sized worlds around other stars.

Since 1995, astronomers have been discovering these extrasolar planets and now know of more than three hundred. As observational techniques have been refined and the data continuously taken, so smaller and smaller planets have been discovered. Now, with CNES-ESA's COROT and NASA's Kepler missions, the prospect of discovering Earth-sized worlds in Earth-like orbits around other stars is better than ever.

Venus South Pole Region As has been proved with the discovery of gas giant planets, as soon as astronomers know that they are there, they invent all sorts of innovative methods to separate the planet's feeble light from the overwhelming glare of the star.

One thing has become obvious from the study of Earth using Venus Express: determining whether a planet is habitable is not going to be easy. "We see water and molecular oxygen in Earth's atmosphere, but Venus also shows these signatures. So looking at these molecules is not enough," says Piccioni.

Instead, astronomers are going to have to search for more subtle signals, perhaps the so-called red edge caused by photosynthetic life. "Green plants are bright in the near infrared," says Grinspoon. The analysis to see whether this red edge is visible is just beginning.

The team will also compare spectra of the Earth's oceans with those taken when the continents are facing Venus Express. "We have initiated the first sustained program of Earth observation from a distant platform," says Grinspoon. Although the observations may not tell us anything new about the Earth, they will allow us to unveil far-off worlds, making them seem more real than simply dots of light.