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Dive into the research topics where Valérie Wilquet is active.

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Featured researches published by Valérie Wilquet.


Nature | 2007

A warm layer in Venus' cryosphere and high-altitude measurements of HF, HCl, H2O and HDO

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.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2008

Composition of the Venus mesosphere measured by Solar Occultation at Infrared on board Venus Express

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.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2009

Preliminary characterization of the upper haze by SPICAV/SOIR solar occultation in UV to mid‐IR onboard Venus Express

Valérie Wilquet; Anna Fedorova; Frank Montmessin; Rachel Drummond; Arnaud Mahieux; Ann Carine Vandaele; Eric Villard; Oleg Korablev

The Spectroscopy for Investigation of Characteristics of the Atmosphere of Venus/Solar Occultation at Infrared (SPICAV/SOIR) suite of instruments onboard the Venus Express spacecraft comprises three spectrometers covering a wavelength range from ultraviolet to midinfrared and an altitude range from 70 to >100 km. However, it is only recently (more than 1 year after the beginning of the mission) that the three spectrometers can operate simultaneously in the solar occultation mode. These observations have enabled the study of the properties of the Venusian mesosphere over a broad spectral range. In this manuscript, we briefly describe the instrument characteristics and the method used to infer haze microphysical properties from a data set of three selected orbits. Discussion focuses on the wavelength dependence of the continuum, which is primarily shaped by the extinction caused by the aerosol particles of the upper haze. This wavelength dependence is directly related to the effective particle radius (cross section weighted mean radius) of the particles. Through independent analyses for the three channels, we demonstrate the potential to characterize the aerosols in the mesosphere of Venus. The classical assumption that the upper haze is only composed of submicron particles is not sufficient to explain the observations. We find that at high northern latitudes, two types of particles coexist in the upper haze of Venus: mode 1 of mean radius 0.1 ≤ rg ≤ 0.3 μm and mode 2 of 0.4 ≤ rg ≤ 1.0 μm. An additional population of micron-sized aerosols seems, therefore, needed to reconcile the data of the three spectrometers. Moreover, we observe substantial temporal variations of aerosol extinction over a time scale of 24 h.


Applied Optics | 2008

In-flight performance and calibration of SPICAV SOIR onboard Venus Express

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

Densities and temperatures in the Venus mesosphere and lower thermosphere retrieved from SOIR on board Venus Express: Retrieval technique

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.


Optics Express | 2009

A new method for determining the transfer function of an acousto optical tunable filter.

Arnaud Mahieux; Valérie Wilquet; Rachel Drummond; Denis Belyaev; A. Federova; Ann Carine Vandaele

The current study describes the determination of the transfer function of an Acousto Optical Tunable Filter from the in-flight solar observations of the SOIR instrument on board Venus Express. An approach is proposed in order to reconstruct the transfer function profile from the analysis of various solar lines. Moreover this technique allows the determination of the evolution of the transfer function as a function of the AOTF radio frequency.


Optics Express | 2013

Improved calibration of SOIR/Venus Express spectra

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.


Optics Express | 2016

Optical and radiometric models of the NOMAD instrument part II: the infrared channels - SO and LNO

Ian R. Thomas; Ann Carine Vandaele; Séverine Robert; Eddy Neefs; Rachel Drummond; Frank Daerden; Sofie Delanoye; Bojan Ristic; Sophie Berkenbosch; Roland Clairquin; Jeroen Maes; Sabrina Bonnewijn; C. Depiesse; Arnaud Mahieux; L. Trompet; L. Neary; Yannick Willame; Valérie Wilquet; D. Nevejans; Ludovic Aballea; Wouter Moelans; L. De Vos; Stefan Lesschaeve; N. Van Vooren; J. J. Lopez-Moreno; Manish R. Patel; G. Bellucci

NOMAD is a suite of three spectrometers that will be launched in 2016 as part of the joint ESA-Roscosmos ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter mission. The instrument contains three channels that cover the IR and UV spectral ranges and can perform solar occultation, nadir and limb observations, to detect and map a wide variety of Martian atmospheric gases and trace species. Part I of this work described the models of the UVIS channel; in this second part, we present the optical models representing the two IR channels, SO (Solar Occultation) and LNO (Limb, Nadir and Occultation), and use them to determine signal to noise ratios (SNRs) for many expected observational cases. In solar occultation mode, both the SO and LNO channel exhibit very high SNRs >5000. SNRs of around 100 were found for the LNO channel in nadir mode, depending on the atmospheric conditions, Martian surface properties, and observation geometry.


Applied Optics | 2016

Improved algorithm for the transmittance estimation of spectra obtained with SOIR/Venus Express

Loïc Trompet; Arnaud Mahieux; Bojan Ristic; Séverine Robert; Valérie Wilquet; Ian R. Thomas; Ann Carine Vandaele

The Solar Occultation in the InfraRed (SOIR) instrument onboard the ESA Venus Express spacecraft, an infrared spectrometer sensitive from 2.2 to 4.3 μm, probed the atmosphere of Venus from June 2006 until December 2014. During this time, it performed more than 750 solar occultations of the Venus mesosphere and lower thermosphere. A new procedure has been developed for the estimation of the transmittance in order to decrease the number of rejected spectra, to check that the treated spectra are well calibrated, and to improve the quality of the calibrated spectra by reducing the noise and accurately normalizing it to the solar spectrum.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2008

First observations of SO2 above Venus' clouds by means of Solar Occultation in the Infrared

Denis Belyaev; Oleg Korablev; Anna Fedorova; Ann Carine Vandaele; Frank Montmessin; Arnaud Mahieux; Valérie Wilquet; Rachel Drummond

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Arnaud Mahieux

Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy

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Séverine Robert

Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy

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Rachel Drummond

Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy

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Oleg Korablev

Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology

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Anna Fedorova

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Ian R. Thomas

Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy

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Sarah Chamberlain

Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy

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Denis Belyaev

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Eddy Neefs

Belgian Institute for Space Aeronomy

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