Eddy Neefs
Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy
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Featured researches published by Eddy Neefs.
Science | 2015
Kathrin Altwegg; H. Balsiger; Akiva Bar-Nun; Jean-Jacques Berthelier; André Bieler; P. Bochsler; Christelle Briois; Ursina Maria Calmonte; Michael R. Combi; J. De Keyser; P. Eberhardt; Björn Fiethe; S. A. Fuselier; Sébastien Gasc; Tamas I. Gombosi; Kenneth Calvin Hansen; Myrtha Hässig; Annette Jäckel; Ernest Kopp; A. Korth; L. Leroy; U. Mall; Bernard Marty; Olivier Mousis; Eddy Neefs; Tobias Owen; H. Rème; Martin Rubin; Thierry Sémon; Chia-Yu Tzou
The provenance of water and organic compounds on Earth and other terrestrial planets has been discussed for a long time without reaching a consensus. One of the best means to distinguish between different scenarios is by determining the deuterium-to-hydrogen (D/H) ratios in the reservoirs for comets and Earth’s oceans. Here, we report the direct in situ measurement of the D/H ratio in the Jupiter family comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko by the ROSINA mass spectrometer aboard the European Space Agency’s Rosetta spacecraft, which is found to be (5.3 ± 0.7) × 10−4—that is, approximately three times the terrestrial value. Previous cometary measurements and our new finding suggest a wide range of D/H ratios in the water within Jupiter family objects and preclude the idea that this reservoir is solely composed of Earth ocean–like water.
Science | 2015
Myrtha Hässig; Kathrin Altwegg; H. Balsiger; Akiva Bar-Nun; J. J. Berthelier; André Bieler; P. Bochsler; Christelle Briois; Ursina Maria Calmonte; Michael R. Combi; J. De Keyser; P. Eberhardt; Björn Fiethe; S. A. Fuselier; M. Galand; Sébastien Gasc; Tamas I. Gombosi; Kenneth Calvin Hansen; Annette Jäckel; H. U. Keller; Ernest Kopp; A. Korth; E. Kührt; Léna Le Roy; U. Mall; Bernard Marty; Olivier Mousis; Eddy Neefs; Tobias Owen; H. Rème
Comets contain the best-preserved material from the beginning of our planetary system. Their nuclei and comae composition reveal clues about physical and chemical conditions during the early solar system when comets formed. ROSINA (Rosetta Orbiter Spectrometer for Ion and Neutral Analysis) onboard the Rosetta spacecraft has measured the coma composition of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko with well-sampled time resolution per rotation. Measurements were made over many comet rotation periods and a wide range of latitudes. These measurements show large fluctuations in composition in a heterogeneous coma that has diurnal and possibly seasonal variations in the major outgassing species: water, carbon monoxide, and carbon dioxide. These results indicate a complex coma-nucleus relationship where seasonal variations may be driven by temperature differences just below the comet surface.
Nature | 2007
Ann Carine Vandaele; Oleg Korablev; Eric Villard; Anna Fedorova; Didier Fussen; Eric Quémerais; Denis Belyaev; Arnaud Mahieux; Frank Montmessin; Christian Müller; Eddy Neefs; D. Nevejans; Valérie Wilquet; Jacques Dubois; Alain Hauchecorne; A. V. Stepanov; Imant I. Vinogradov; A. V. Rodin; Michel Cabane; Eric Chassefière; Jean-Yves Chaufray; E. Dimarellis; François Leblanc; Florence Lefevre; Patrice Rannou; E. Van Ransbeeck; L. V. Zasova; F. Forget; Sébastien Lebonnois; Dmitri Titov
Venus has thick clouds of H2SO4 aerosol particles extending from altitudes of 40 to 60 km. The 60–100 km region (the mesosphere) is a transition region between the 4 day retrograde superrotation at the top of the thick clouds and the solar–antisolar circulation in the thermosphere (above 100 km), which has upwelling over the subsolar point and transport to the nightside. The mesosphere has a light haze of variable optical thickness, with CO, SO2, HCl, HF, H2O and HDO as the most important minor gaseous constituents, but the vertical distribution of the haze and molecules is poorly known because previous descent probes began their measurements at or below 60 km. Here we report the detection of an extensive layer of warm air at altitudes 90–120 km on the night side that we interpret as the result of adiabatic heating during air subsidence. Such a strong temperature inversion was not expected, because the night side of Venus was otherwise so cold that it was named the ‘cryosphere’ above 100 km. We also measured the mesospheric distributions of HF, HCl, H2O and HDO. HCl is less abundant than reported 40 years ago. HDO/H2O is enhanced by a factor of ∼2.5 with respect to the lower atmosphere, and there is a general depletion of H2O around 80–90 km for which we have no explanation.
Applied Optics | 2006
Dennis Nevejans; Eddy Neefs; Emiel Van Ransbeeck; Sophie Berkenbosch; Roland Clairquin; Lieve De Vos; Wouter Moelans; Stijn Glorieux; Ann Baeke; Oleg Korablev; Imant I. Vinogradov; Yuri Kalinnikov; Benny Bach; Jean-Pierre Dubois; Eric Villard
A new compact spaceborne high-resolution spectrometer developed for the European Space Agencys Venus Express spacecraft is described. It operates in the IR wavelength range of 2.2 to 4.3 microm and measures absorption spectra of minor constituents in the Venusian atmosphere. It uses a novel echelle grating with a groove density of 4 lines/mm in a Littrow configuration in combination with an IR acousto-optic tunable filter for order sorting and an actively cooled HgCdTe focal plane array of 256 by 320 pixels. It is designed to obtain an instrument line profile of 0.2 cm(-1). First results on optical and spectral properties are reported.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2008
Ann Carine Vandaele; M. De Mazière; Rachel Drummond; Arnaud Mahieux; Eddy Neefs; Valérie Wilquet; Oleg Korablev; Anna Fedorova; Denis V. Belyaev; Franck Montmessin
Solar Occultation at Infrared (SOIR), which is a part of the Spectroscopy for Investigation of Characteristics of the Atmosphere of Venus (SPICAV) instrument on board Venus Express, combines an echelle-grating spectrometer with an acoustooptical tunable filter. It performs solar occultation measurements in the IR region at a high spectral resolution better than all previously flown planetary spectrometers. The wavelength range probed allows for a detailed chemical inventory of the Venus atmosphere above the cloud layer, with an emphasis on the vertical distribution of the gases. A general description of the retrieval technique is given and is illustrated by some results obtained for CO2 and for a series of minor constituents, such as H2O, HDO, CO, HCl, and HF. Detection limits for previously undetected species will also be discussed.
Applied Optics | 2008
Arnaud Mahieux; Sophie Berkenbosch; Roland Clairquin; Didier Fussen; N. Mateshvili; Eddy Neefs; D. Nevejans; Bojan Ristic; Ann Carine Vandaele; Valérie Wilquet; Denis Belyaev; Anna Fedorova; Oleg Korablev; Eric Villard; Franck Montmessin
Solar occultation in the infrared, part of the Spectoscopy for Investigation of Characteristics of the Atmosphere of Venus (SPICAV) instrument onboard Venus Express, combines an echelle grating spectrometer with an acousto-optic tunable filter (AOTF). It performs solar occultation measurements in the IR region at high spectral resolution. The wavelength range probed allows a detailed chemical inventory of Venuss atmosphere above the cloud layer, highlighting the vertical distribution of gases. A general description of the instrument and its in-flight performance is given. Different calibrations and data corrections are investigated, in particular the dark current and thermal background, the nonlinearity and pixel-to-pixel variability of the detector, the sensitivity of the instrument, the AOTF properties, and the spectral calibration and resolution.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2010
Arnaud Mahieux; Ann Carine Vandaele; Eddy Neefs; Séverine Robert; Valérie Wilquet; Rachel Drummond; A. Federova
The SOIR instrument, flying on board Venus Express, operates in the infrared spectral domain and uses the solar occultation technique to determine the vertical profiles of several key constituents of the Venus atmosphere. The retrieval algorithm is based on the optimal estimation method, and solves the problem simultaneously on all spectra belonging to one occultation sequence. Vertical profiles of H2O, CO, HCl, and HF, as well as some of their isotopologues, are routinely obtained for altitudes ranging typically from 70 to 120 km, depending on the species and the spectral region recorded. In the case of CO2, a vertical profile from 70 up to 150 km can be obtained by combining different spectral intervals. Rotational temperature is also retrieved directly from the CO2 signature in the spectra. The present paper describes the method used to derive the above mentioned atmospheric quantities and temperature profiles. The method is applied on some retrieval cases illustrating the capabilities of the technique. More examples of results will be presented and discussed in a following companion paper which will focus on the CO2 vertical profiles of the whole data set.
Applied Optics | 2015
Eddy Neefs; Ann Carine Vandaele; Rachel Drummond; Ian R. Thomas; Sophie Berkenbosch; Roland Clairquin; Sofie Delanoye; Bojan Ristic; Jeroen Maes; Sabrina Bonnewijn; Gerry Pieck; Eddy Equeter; C. Depiesse; Frank Daerden; Emiel Van Ransbeeck; D. Nevejans; J. Rodriguez-Gomez; J. J. Lopez-Moreno; Rosario Sanz; Rafael Talero Morales; Gian Paolo Candini; M. Carmen Pastor-Morales; Beatriz Aparicio del Moral; José-Maria Jeronimo-Zafra; Juan Manuel Gómez-López; Gustavo Alonso-Rodrigo; Isabel Pérez-Grande; Javier Cubas; Alejandro M. Gomez-Sanjuan; Fermín Navarro-Medina
NOMAD is a spectrometer suite on board ESAs ExoMars trace gas orbiter due for launch in January 2016. NOMAD consists of two infrared channels and one ultraviolet and visible channel allowing the instrument to perform observations quasi-constantly, by taking nadir measurements at dayside and nightside, and during solar occultations. In this paper, the design, manufacturing, and testing of the two infrared channels are described. We focus upon the optical working principle in these channels, where an echelle grating, used as a diffractive element, is combined with an acousto-optical tunable filter, used as a diffraction order sorter.
Optics Express | 2015
Ann Carine Vandaele; Yannick Willame; C. Depiesse; Ian R. Thomas; Séverine Robert; D. Bolsée; Manish R. Patel; Jon Mason; M. R. Leese; Stefan Lesschaeve; Philippe Antoine; Frank Daerden; Sofie Delanoye; Rachel Drummond; Eddy Neefs; Bojan Ristic; J. J. Lopez-Moreno; G. Bellucci; Nomad Team
The NOMAD instrument has been designed to best fulfil the science objectives of the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter mission that will be launched in 2016. The instrument is a combination of three channels that cover the UV, visible and IR spectral ranges and can perform solar occultation, nadir and limb observations. In this series of two papers, we present the optical models representing the three channels of the instrument and use them to determine signal to noise levels for different observation modes and Martian conditions. In this first part, we focus on the UVIS channel, which will sound the Martian atmosphere using nadir and solar occultation viewing modes, covering the 200-650nm spectral range. High SNR levels (>1000) can easily be reached for wavelengths higher than 300nm both in solar occultation and nadir modes when considering binning. Below 300nm SNR are lower primarily because of the lower signal and the impact of atmospheric absorption.
Optics Express | 2013
Ann Carine Vandaele; Arnaud Mahieux; Séverine Robert; Sophie Berkenbosch; Roland Clairquin; Rachel Drummond; Vincent Letocart; Eddy Neefs; Bojan Ristic; Valérie Wilquet; Frédéric Colomer; Denis Belyaev
The SOIR instrument on board the ESA Venus Express mission has been operational since the insertion of the satellite around Venus in April 2006. Since then, it has delivered high quality IR solar occultation spectra of the atmosphere of Venus. The different steps from raw spectra to archived data are described and explained in detail here. These consist of corrections for the dark current and for the non-linearity of the detector; removing bad pixels, as well as deriving noise. The spectral calibration procedure is described, along with all ancillary data necessary for the understanding and interpretation of the SOIR data. These include the full characterization of the AOTF filter, one of the major elements of the instrument. All these data can be found in the ESA PSA archive.