Venus upper atmosphere revealed by a GCM: II. Model validation with temperature and density measurements
Gabriella Gilli, Thomas Navarro, Sebastien Lebonnois, Diogo Quirino,, Vasco Silva, Aurelien Stolzenbach, Franck Lef\`evre, Gerald Schubert

TL;DR
This study presents an improved Venus GCM with enhanced resolution and parameterizations, validated against observational data, revealing better temperature and density agreement and insights into atmospheric dynamics such as retrograde winds and wave influences.
Contribution
The paper introduces a high-resolution Venus GCM with non-LTE and gravity wave parameterizations, validated against recent Venus Express and ground-based data, improving understanding of upper atmospheric dynamics.
Findings
Better temperature agreement above 90 km compared to previous models.
Density of CO2, CO, and O matches observed trends and magnitudes.
Detection of a weak westward retrograde wind influenced by Kelvin waves and gravity waves.
Abstract
An improved high-resolution ground-to-thermosphere version of the Institut Pierre-Simon Laplace (IPSL) Venus General Circulation Model (VGCM), including non-orographic gravity waves (GW) parameterization and fine-tuned non-LTE parameters, is presented here. We focus on the validation of the model built from a collection of data mostly from Venus Express experiments and coordinated ground-based telescope campaigns, in the upper mesosphere/lower thermosphere of Venus. These simulations result in an overall better agreement with temperature observations above 90 km, compared with previous versions of the VGCM. Density of CO2 and light species (CO and O) are also comparable with observations in terms of trend and order of magnitude. Systematic biases in the temperature structure are found at about 80-100 km and above 130 km at the terminator, possibly due to assumptions on the CO2 mixing…
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