Equatorial jet in the lower to middle cloud layer of Venus revealed by Akatsuki
T. Horinouchi, S. Murakami, T. Satoh, J. Peralta, K. Ogohara, T., Kouyama, T. Imamura, H. Kashimura, S. S. Limaye, K. McGouldrick, M. Nakamura,, T. M. Sato, K. Sugiyama, M. Takagi, S. Watanabe, M. Yamada, A. Yamazaki and, E. F. Young

TL;DR
This study reports the first detection of an equatorial jet in Venus's lower to middle cloud layer, revealing unexpected high wind speeds and variability that shed light on the planet's superrotational atmosphere.
Contribution
It presents the discovery of an equatorial jet in Venus's cloud layer, a feature not previously observed, using infrared imaging from the Akatsuki orbiter.
Findings
Detected winds exceeding 80 m/s at low latitudes
Identified an equatorial jet near the planet's equator
Observed variability in zonal flow patterns
Abstract
The Venusian atmosphere is in a state of superrotation where prevailing westward winds move much faster than the planet's rotation. Venus is covered with thick clouds that extend from about 45 to 70 km altitude, but thermal radiation emitted from the lower atmosphere and the surface on the planet's nightside escapes to space at narrow spectral windows of the near-infrared. The radiation can be used to estimate winds by tracking the silhouettes of clouds in the lower and middle cloud regions below about 57 km in altitude. Estimates of wind speeds have ranged from 50 to 70 m/s at low to mid-latitudes, either nearly constant across latitudes or with winds peaking at mid-latitudes. Here we report the detection of winds at low latitude exceeding 80 m/s using IR2 camera images from the Akatsuki orbiter taken during July and August 2016. The angular speed around the planetary rotation axis…
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