Complications in the ALMA Detection of Phosphine at Venus
Alex B. Akins, Andrew P. Lincowski, Victoria S. Meadows, Paul G., Steffes

TL;DR
This paper critically reassesses ALMA data claiming phosphine detection in Venus's atmosphere, highlighting calibration issues and spectral line dilution effects that cast doubt on the original phosphine detection claim.
Contribution
The study reanalyzes ALMA observations with revised calibration and investigates spectral line dilution, challenging previous phosphine detection claims in Venus's atmosphere.
Findings
Calibration revisions eliminate the spectral feature attributed to PH₃.
Spectral line dilution effects can hide SO₂ at higher abundances.
Further observations are needed to confirm or refute phosphine presence.
Abstract
Recently published ALMA observations suggest the presence of 20 ppb PH in the upper clouds of Venus. This is an unexpected result, as PH does not have a readily apparent source and should be rapidly photochemically destroyed according to our current understanding of Venus atmospheric chemistry. While the reported PH spectral line at 266.94 GHz is nearly co-located with an SO spectral line, the non-detection of stronger SO lines in the wideband ALMA data is used to rule out SO as the origin of the feature. We present a reassessment of wideband and narrowband datasets derived from these ALMA observations. The ALMA observations are re-reduced following both the initial and revised calibration procedures discussed by the authors of the original study. We also investigate the phenomenon of apparent spectral line dilution over varying spatial scales resulting from the…
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