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Dive into the research topics where Nikolay Ignatiev is active.

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Featured researches published by Nikolay Ignatiev.


Nature | 2004

Perennial water ice identified in the south polar cap of Mars.

Jean-Pierre Bibring; Y. Langevin; F. Poulet; A. Gendrin; B. Gondet; Michel Berthé; Alain Soufflot; P. Drossart; M. Combes; G. Belluci; V.I. Moroz; N. Mangold; Bernard Schmitt; Stephane Erard; Olivier Forni; N. Manaud; G. Poulleau; Th. Encrenaz; Thierry Fouchet; Riccardo Melchiorri; F. Altieri; V. Formisano; G. Bonello; S. Fonti; F. Capaccioni; P. Cerroni; Angioletta Coradini; V. Kottsov; Nikolay Ignatiev; Dmitri Titov

The inventory of water and carbon dioxide reservoirs on Mars are important clues for understanding the geological, climatic and potentially exobiological evolution of the planet. From the early mapping observation of the permanent ice caps on the martian poles, the northern cap was believed to be mainly composed of water ice, whereas the southern cap was thought to be constituted of carbon dioxide ice. However, recent missions (NASA missions Mars Global Surveyor and Odyssey) have revealed surface structures, altimetry profiles, underlying buried hydrogen, and temperatures of the south polar regions that are thermodynamically consistent with a mixture of surface water ice and carbon dioxide. Here we present the first direct identification and mapping of both carbon dioxide and water ice in the martian high southern latitudes, at a resolution of 2 km, during the local summer, when the extent of the polar ice is at its minimum. We observe that this south polar cap contains perennial water ice in extended areas: as a small admixture to carbon dioxide in the bright regions; associated with dust, without carbon dioxide, at the edges of this bright cap; and, unexpectedly, in large areas tens of kilometres away from the bright cap.


Nature | 2007

South-polar features on Venus similar to those near the north pole

Giuseppe Piccioni; P. Drossart; A. Sánchez-Lavega; R. Hueso; F. W. Taylor; Colin F. Wilson; D. Grassi; L. V. Zasova; Maria Luisa Moriconi; A. Adriani; Sebastien Lebonnois; Angioletta Coradini; B. Bezard; F. Angrilli; Gabriele Arnold; Kevin H. Baines; G. Bellucci; J. Benkhoff; Jean-Pierre Bibring; A. Blanco; M. I. Blecka; Robert W. Carlson; A. M. Di Lellis; Th. Encrenaz; Stephane Erard; S. Fonti; V. Formisano; T. Fouchet; Raphael F. Garcia; Rainer Haus

Venus has no seasons, slow rotation and a very massive atmosphere, which is mainly carbon dioxide with clouds primarily of sulphuric acid droplets. Infrared observations by previous missions to Venus revealed a bright ‘dipole’ feature surrounded by a cold ‘collar’ at its north pole. The polar dipole is a ‘double-eye’ feature at the centre of a vast vortex that rotates around the pole, and is possibly associated with rapid downwelling. The polar cold collar is a wide, shallow river of cold air that circulates around the polar vortex. One outstanding question has been whether the global circulation was symmetric, such that a dipole feature existed at the south pole. Here we report observations of Venus’ south-polar region, where we have seen clouds with morphology much like those around the north pole, but rotating somewhat faster than the northern dipole. The vortex may extend down to the lower cloud layers that lie at about 50 km height and perhaps deeper. The spectroscopic properties of the clouds around the south pole are compatible with a sulphuric acid composition.


Nature | 2007

Morphology and dynamics of the upper cloud layer of Venus

W. J. Markiewicz; Dmitrij V. Titov; Sanjay S. Limaye; H. U. Keller; Nikolay Ignatiev; R. Jaumann; Nicolas Thomas; H. Michalik; Richard Moissl; Paolo Russo

Venus is completely covered by a thick cloud layer, of which the upper part is composed of sulphuric acid and some unknown aerosols. The cloud tops are in fast retrograde rotation (super-rotation), but the factors responsible for this super-rotation are unknown. Here we report observations of Venus with the Venus Monitoring Camera on board the Venus Express spacecraft. We investigate both global and small-scale properties of the clouds, their temporal and latitudinal variations, and derive wind velocities. The southern polar region is highly variable and can change dramatically on timescales as short as one day, perhaps arising from the injection of SO2 into the mesosphere. The convective cells in the vicinity of the subsolar point are much smaller than previously inferred, which we interpret as indicating that they are confined to the upper cloud layer, contrary to previous conclusions, but consistent with more recent study.


Nature | 2007

A dynamic upper atmosphere of Venus as revealed by VIRTIS on Venus Express

P. Drossart; Giuseppe Piccioni; J.-C. Gérard; Miguel Angel Lopez-Valverde; A. Sánchez-Lavega; L. V. Zasova; R. Hueso; F. W. Taylor; B. Bezard; A. Adriani; F. Angrilli; Gabriele Arnold; Kevin H. Baines; G. Bellucci; J. Benkhoff; Jean-Pierre Bibring; A. Blanco; M. I. Blecka; Robert W. Carlson; Angioletta Coradini; A. M. Di Lellis; Th. Encrenaz; Stephane Erard; S. Fonti; V. Formisano; T. Fouchet; Raphael F. Garcia; Rainer Haus; J. Helbert; Nikolay Ignatiev

The upper atmosphere of a planet is a transition region in which energy is transferred between the deeper atmosphere and outer space. Molecular emissions from the upper atmosphere (90–120 km altitude) of Venus can be used to investigate the energetics and to trace the circulation of this hitherto little-studied region. Previous spacecraft and ground-based observations of infrared emission from CO2, O2 and NO have established that photochemical and dynamic activity controls the structure of the upper atmosphere of Venus. These data, however, have left unresolved the precise altitude of the emission owing to a lack of data and of an adequate observing geometry. Here we report measurements of day-side CO2 non-local thermodynamic equilibrium emission at 4.3 µm, extending from 90 to 120 km altitude, and of night-side O2 emission extending from 95 to 100 km. The CO2 emission peak occurs at ∼115 km and varies with solar zenith angle over a range of ∼10 km. This confirms previous modelling, and permits the beginning of a systematic study of the variability of the emission. The O2 peak emission happens at 96 km ± 1 km, which is consistent with three-body recombination of oxygen atoms transported from the day side by a global thermospheric sub-solar to anti-solar circulation, as previously predicted.


Nature | 2008

Atmospheric structure and dynamics as the cause of ultraviolet markings in the clouds of Venus

Dmitrij V. Titov; F. W. Taylor; Nikolay Ignatiev; Wojciech J. Markiewicz; Giuseppe Piccioni; Pierre Drossart

When seen in ultraviolet light, Venus has contrast features that arise from the non-uniform distribution of unknown absorbers within the sulphuric acid clouds and seem to trace dynamical activity in the middle atmosphere. It has long been unclear whether the global pattern arises from differences in cloud top altitude (which was earlier estimated to be 66–72 km), compositional variations or temperature contrasts. Here we report multi-wavelength imaging that reveals that the dark low latitudes are dominated by convective mixing which brings the ultraviolet absorbers up from depth. The bright and uniform mid-latitude clouds reside in the ‘cold collar’, an annulus of cold air characterized by ∼30 K lower temperatures with a positive lapse rate, which suppresses vertical mixing and cuts off the supply of ultraviolet absorbers from below. In low and middle latitudes, the visible cloud top is located at a remarkably constant altitude of 72 ± 1 km in both the ultraviolet dark and bright regions, indicating that the brightness variations result from compositional differences caused by the colder environment rather than by elevation changes. The cloud top descends to ∼64 km in the eye of the hemispheric vortex, which appears as a depression in the upper cloud deck. The ultraviolet dark circular streaks enclose the vortex eye and are dynamically connected to it.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2015

Active Volcanism on Venus in the Ganiki Chasma Rift Zone

E.V. Shalygin; Wojciech J. Markiewicz; A. T. Basilevsky; Dmitrii V. Titov; Nikolay Ignatiev; James W. Head

Venus is known to have been volcanically resurfaced in the last third of solar system history and to have undergone a significant decrease in volcanic activity a few hundred million years ago. However, fundamental questions remain: Is Venus still volcanically active today, and if so, where and in what geological and geodynamic environment? Here we show evidence from the Venus Express Venus Monitoring Camera for transient bright spots that are consistent with the extrusion of lava flows that locally cause significantly elevated surface temperatures. The very strong spatial correlation of the transient bright spots with the extremely young Ganiki Chasma, their similarity to locations of rift-associated volcanism on Earth, provide strong evidence for their volcanic origin and suggests that Venus is currently geodynamically active.


Advances in Space Research | 2002

PFS for Mars Express: a new approach to study the Martian atmosphere

V. Formisano; D. Grassi; Nikolay Ignatiev; L. V. Zasova; Alessandro Maturilli; D. V. Titov

PFS, a Fourier spectrometer for the study of the Martian atmosphere, will fly on Mars Express. For the first time the study of the 15 μm CO2 absorption band, which gives the vertical temperature-pressure profile, will be carried out simultaneously with the retrieval of the aerosols number density vertical profile using multi bands approach and using the measured ground pressure from the 2 μm CO2 absorption band. It will enable us to get the vertical structure of the Martian atmosphere, the water vapour column abundance and vertical distribution, and the vertical distribution of the dust. A comparison with all the previously flown spectrometers will be presented.


Infrared Remote Sensing and Instrumentation XXVI | 2018

ACS/TIRVIM: Calibration and first results

Alexey Shakun; Michail Luginin; Alessandro Maturilli; D. Grassi; Nikolay Ignatiev; A. V. Grigoriev; B. E. Moshkin; Oleg Korablev; Gabriele Arnold; Andrey Kungurov; Vladislav Makarov; Fedor Martynovich; Igor A. Maslov; Dmitry Merzlyakov; Yuri Nikolskiy; Dmitry Patsaev; Aleksandr Santos-Skripko; Oleg Sazonov; Viktor Shashkin; Igor Stupin; Alexander Zharkov

Atmospheric Chemistry Suite (ACS) is a part of Russian contribution to ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO) ESA-Roscosmos mission. ACS includes three separate infrared spectrometers (MIR, NIR and TIRVIM) with a different spectral coverage and targeted to the different science goals. ACS TIRVIM is a Fourier-transform spectrometer based on 2-inch double pendulum interferometer. It operates in the spectral range of 1.7-7 μm with the best spectral resolution 0.13 cm-1 for solar occultation (SO) mode and 0.8 cm-1 for nadir mode. In nadir mode TIRVIM is purposed to thermal sounding of the Martian atmosphere and aerosol properties retrieval. In SO mode TIRVIM is dedicated to trace gases measurements complementing to ACS MIR. After successful launch of ExoMars TGO on 16 April 2016 there were three time slots for turning on science instruments during cruise phase to execute necessary checks and calibration measurements. In March 2018 the nominal science orbit was reached after cruise and aerobraking phases. The first results of TIRVIM data processing show high performance of the instrument.


Archive | 2004

OMEGA: Observatoire pour la Minéralogie, l’Eau, les Glaces et l’Activité

Jean-Pierre Bibring; Alain Soufflot; Maxime Berthe; Y. Langevin; B. Gondet; P. Drossart; Marc Bouye; M. Combes; Pascal Puget; Alain Semery; G. Bellucci; Vittorio Formisano; Vassili I. Moroz; V. Kottsov; G. Bonello; Stephane Erard; O. Forni; A. Gendrin; N. Manaud; F. Poulet; G. Poulleau; Thérèse Encrenaz; Thierry Fouchet; Ricardo J. M. Melchiori; F. Altieri; Nikolay Ignatiev; Dmitri Titov; L. V. Zasova; Angioletta Coradini; F. Capacionni


Planetary and Space Science | 2007

Scientific goals for the observation of Venus by VIRTIS on ESA/Venus Express mission

Pierre Drossart; Giuseppe Piccioni; A. Adriani; F. Angrilli; Gabriele Arnold; Kevin H. Baines; G. Bellucci; J. Benkhoff; B. Bézard; Jean-Pierre Bibring; A. Blanco; M.I. Blecka; Robert W. Carlson; Angioletta Coradini; A. M. Di Lellis; T. Encrenaz; Stephane Erard; S. Fonti; V. Formisano; Thierry Fouchet; R. Garcia; Rainer Haus; J. Helbert; Nikolay Ignatiev; Patrick G. J. Irwin; Y. Langevin; Sebastien Lebonnois; Miguel Angel Lopez-Valverde; D. Luz; Lucia Marinangeli

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L. V. Zasova

Russian Academy of Sciences

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D. Grassi

Planetary Science Institute

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Sanjay S. Limaye

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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