Venuses near and far

Topic: Planets and Exoplanets

Session Title: Venuses near and far

Description:

What can our nearest neighbour tell us about planets, planet formation and evolution, and the possibility of life elsewhere? We plan a broad session of interest to observational astronomers, planetary scientists and space-mission teams. Venus is at the forefront of exploration of our solar system, with multiple missions launching within the decade, while observations are starting to suggest that “exo-Venuses” – with toxic, hot, runaway atmospheres – could be as numerous as exo-Earth analogues. How do small rocky planets end up with such diverse end-points, even when hosted by the same star? Are there any lessons for us learn about “climates that go bad”, from the point of view of advanced life? Contributed talks may cover planetary geology, atmospheric studies, interpretation challenges (including in the context of gases that would be “biosignatures” on Earth), exo-planet characterisation, planet population synthesis and the formation and chemistry of proto-planetary discs, with other related topics highly encouraged. 

Organiser(s): 

Jane Greaves (Cardiff)

Dave Clements (Imperial)

Schedule:

Venue: WILB-LT28

Session 1: Wednesday 17th July, 15:00 – 17:00

NameTimeTitle
Jane Greaves15:00Introduction to the session
Agnibha Banerjee15:05Atmospheric retrievals reveal a hybrid atmosphere and possible sulfur species on super-earth L 98-59 d 
Dave Clements (Online)15:20The JCMT-Venus Project
Wei Tang15:50JCMT-Venus: Monitoring HDO absorption in Venus’ Atmosphere
Anita Richards16:05Too big or too small or just right? ALMA and Venuses
Jane Greaves16:20Ammonia at Venus
Panel Q&A16:35