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Data availability
This paper makes use of the 2018.A.00023.S ALMA data, available at https://almascience.nrao.edu/asax. The JCMT data are available at https://www.eaobservatory.org/jcmt/science/archive.
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Acknowledgements
We would like to commend the team of Greaves et al.1 for making their data and scripts available. ALMA is a partnership of ESO (representing its member states), NSF (USA) and NINS (Japan), together with NRC (Canada), MOST and ASIAA (Taiwan) and KASI (Republic of Korea), in cooperation with the Republic of Chile. The Joint ALMA Observatory is operated by ESO, AUI/NRAO and NAOJ. The JCMT data were collected under project S16BP007. JCMT is operated by the EAO on behalf of NAOJ, ASIAA, KASI and CAMS as well as the National Key R&D Programme of China (2017YFA0402700). Additional funding support is provided by the STFC and participating universities in the United Kingdom and Canada. We recognize and acknowledge the very significant cultural role and reverence that the summit of Maunakea has always had within the indigenous Hawaiian community. We are most fortunate to have the opportunity to conduct observations from this mountain.
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G.L.V., P.G.J.I., M.G., V.K. and G.L. performed the retrievals and the radiative-transfer modelling. M.C., I.d.P. and B.B. calibrated and analysed the ALMA data. S.N.M., C.A.N., S.H.L.-C., R.C., A.E.T., A.M., E.M.M., S.C., N.B. and K.R.d.K. assisted with the interpretation of the interferometric spectra. C.F.W., S.F., T.J.F., M.L., P.H., G.N.A., A.M.M., A.C.V. and R.K. assisted with the interpretation of the results in the context of the Venusian atmosphere and its photochemistry. All authors contributed to writing and revising the manuscript.
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Supplementary Information
Supplementary Figs. 1–4, details of vertical profiles (Section 1), details of the analysis of the ALMA data (Section 2), validation of the ALMA analysis by interpreting other nearby lines (Section 3) and study of the altitude of the probed narrow molecular absorptions (Section 4).
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Villanueva, G.L., Cordiner, M., Irwin, P.G.J. et al. No evidence of phosphine in the atmosphere of Venus from independent analyses. Nat Astron 5, 631–635 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41550-021-01422-z
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41550-021-01422-z
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