Sunlight refraction in the mesosphere of Venus during the transit on June 8th, 2004
P. Tanga, Th. Widemann, B. Sicardy, J.M. Pasachoff, J. Arnaud, L., Comolli, A. Rondi, S. Rondi, P. Suetterlin

TL;DR
This study analyzes the sunlight refraction in Venus's mesosphere during the 2004 transit using ground-based photometry, confirming historical observations and providing new quantitative insights into Venus's atmospheric structure.
Contribution
First quantitative analysis of Venus's aureole during the 2004 transit using diverse imaging systems, linking photometry to atmospheric scale-height and cloud-top variations.
Findings
Confirmed historical descriptions of the aureole.
Provided measurements of aureole flux variation with latitude.
Related photometric data to atmospheric temperature and cloud altitude.
Abstract
Many observers in the past gave detailed descriptions of the telescopic aspect of Venus during its extremely rare transits across the Solar disk. In particular, at the ingress and egress, the portion of the planet's disk outside the Solar photosphere has been repeatedly perceived as outlined by a thin, bright arc ("aureole"). Those historical visual observations allowed inferring the existence of Venus' atmosphere, the bright arc being correctly ascribed to the refraction of light by the outer layers of a dense atmosphere. On June 8th, 2004, fast photometry based on electronic imaging devices allowed the first quantitative analysis of the phenomenon. Several observers used a variety of acquisition systems to image the event -- ranging from amateur-sized to professional telescopes and cameras -- thus collecting for the first time a large amount of quantitative information on this…
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