X-Raying the Dark Side of Venus - Scatter from Venus Magnetotail?
M. Afshari, G. Peres, P. R. Jibben, A. Petralia, F. Reale, M. Weber

TL;DR
This study detects and analyzes unexpected X-ray, EUV, and UV emissions from the dark side of Venus during a transit, suggesting possible scattering in Venus's magnetotail as a novel source of such emissions.
Contribution
It provides the first evidence of significant emissions from Venus's dark side and proposes a new scattering mechanism in Venus's magnetotail as their origin.
Findings
Significant X-ray, EUV, and UV flux detected from Venus's dark side.
Deconvolution confirms the flux is not solely due to instrumental scattering.
Flux correlates with surrounding solar regions, implying scattering in Venus's magnetotail.
Abstract
This work analyzes the X-ray, EUV and UV emission apparently coming from the Earth-facing (dark) side of Venus as observed with Hinode/XRT and SDO/AIA during a transit across the solar disk occurred in 2012. We have measured significant X-Ray, EUV and UV flux from Venus dark side. As a check we have also analyzed a Mercury transit across the solar disk, observed with Hinode/XRT in 2006. We have used the latest version of the Hinode/XRT Point Spread Function (PSF) to deconvolve Venus and Mercury X-ray images, in order to remove possible instrumental scattering. Even after deconvolution, the flux from Venus shadow remains significant while in the case of Mercury it becomes negligible. Since stray-light contamination affects the XRT Ti-poly filter data from the Venus transit in 2012, we performed the same analysis with XRT Al-mesh filter data, which is not affected by the light leak. Even…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
