Re-analysis of the 267 GHz ALMA observations of Venus No statistically significant detection of phosphine

Open Access
Authors
  • F.F.S. van der Tak
Publication date 12-2020
Journal Astronomy & Astrophysics
Article number L2
Volume | Issue number 644
Number of pages 3
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
Context. ALMA observations of Venus at 267 GHz that show the apparent presence of phosphine (PH3) in its atmosphere have been presented in the literature. Phosphine currently has no evident production routes on the planet’s surface or in its atmosphere. Aims. The aim of this work is to assess the statistical reliability of the line detection via independent re-analysis of the ALMA data. Methods. The ALMA data were reduced the same way as in the published study, following the provided scripts. First, the spectral analysis presented in the study was reproduced and assessed. Subsequently, the spectrum, including its dependence on selected ALMA baselines, was statistically evaluated. Results. We find that the 12th-order polynomial fit to the spectral passband utilised in the published study leads to spurious results. Following their recipe, five other > 10σ lines can be produced in absorption or emission within 60 km s−1 from the PH3 1−0 transition frequency by suppressing the surrounding noise. Our independent analysis shows a feature near the PH3 frequency at a ∼2σ level, below the common threshold for statistical significance. Since the spectral data have a non-Gaussian distribution, we consider a feature at such level as statistically unreliable, which cannot be linked to a false positive probability. Conclusions. We find that the published 267 GHz ALMA data provide no statistical evidence for phosphine in the atmosphere of Venus.
Document type Comment/Letter to the editor
Note © ESO 2020
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202039717
Other links https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2020A%26A...644L...2S/abstract
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