SO colloquium at IAA-CSIC this Thursday, 26 March at 12:30

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Mar 23, 2026, 6:13:16 AM (4 days ago) Mar 23
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IAA SO Colloquium

SpeakerAnni MäättänenLATMOS laboratory, Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS)

Date: Thursday, 26 March, 12:30 CST

Place: Salón de Actos

Zoom info: https://rediris.zoom.us/j/5884758913 (ID for the meeting: 588 475 8913)
 


The formation of high-altitude clouds on terrestrial planets

The three rocky planets in the inner Solar System, Mars, Venus and Earth, host many types of clouds. In particular,​ the highest-altitude clouds forming up to 100 km above the surface are the most intriguing ones, as they form at the edge of​ space and are rarely visible to the human eye. On the Earth, the middle atmosphere hosts a sulphuric acid aerosol layer and​ clouds formed of water ice. Both carbon dioxide ice and water ice clouds form in the Martian atmosphere. Venus is​ covered in a​ thick sulphuric acid cloud layer, but above that, water or carbon dioxide ice clouds might form in certain conditions. In addition t​o the necessary ingredient in the form of a​ condensable vapour, one of the keys to cloud formation is pre-existing particles called condensation nuclei. Planet surfaces provide a good source of particles (such as mineral dust, biogenic aerosols, sea salt,​ pollution). However, particles from a surface source cannot reach very high altitudes in large amounts and thus another source,​ such as meteorites, is required in the middle atmosphere. This presentation will provide an overview of the recent advances on​ high-altitude cloud formation on the three planets, and show some images of the thin high-altitude​ clouds we actually can see. It​ will also discuss links between the processes and highlight the remaining open questions.

 
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