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Identification of Jupiter's magnetic equator within H3+ ionospheric emission

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posted on 2018-06-05, 13:21 authored by Tom S. Stallard, Angeline G. Burrell, Henrik Melin, Leigh N. Fletcher, Steve Miller, Luke Moore, James O'Donoghue, John E. P. Connerney, Takehiko Satoh, Rosie E. Johnson
Our understanding of Jupiter’s magnetic field has been developed through a combination of spacecraft measurements at distances >1.8 RJ and images of the aurora (1–7). These models all agree on the strength and direction of the jovian dipole magnetic moments, but, because higher order magnetic moments decay more strongly with distance from the planet, past spacecraft measurements could not easily resolve them. In the past two years, the Juno mission has measured very close to the planet (>1.05 RJ), observing a strongly enhanced localized magnetic field in some orbits (8-9) and resulting in models that identify strong hemispheric asymmetries at mid-to-high latitudes (10, 11). These features could be better resolved by identifying changes in ionospheric density caused by interactions with the magnetic field, but past observations have been unable to spatially resolve such features (12–14). In this study, we identify a dark sinusoidal ribbon of weakened H3+ emission near the jovigraphic equator, which we show to be an ionospheric signature of Jupiter’s magnetic equator. We also observe complex structures in Jupiter’s mid-latitude ionosphere, including one dark spot that is coincident with a localized enhancement in Jupiter’s radial magnetic field observed recently by Juno (10). These features reveal evidence of complex localized interactions between Jupiter’s ionosphere and its magnetic field. Our results provide ground-truth for Juno spacecraft observations and future ionospheric and magnetic field models

Funding

This work was supported by the UK STFC Consolidated grant ST/N000749/1 for H. Melin and T. Stallard and a PhD studentship for R. Johnson. A.G. Burrell was supported by NERC Grant NE/K011766/1 and the start-up funds provided to R. Stoneback by the University of Texas at Dallas. Fletcher was supported by a Royal Society Research Fellowship at the University of Leicester. L.M. was supported by NASA under Grant NNX17AF14G issued through the SSO Planetary Astronomy Program. J.E.P. Connerney and T. Satoh were visiting astronomers at the NASA Infrared Telescope Facility, which is operated by the University of Hawaii under Cooperative Agreement no. NNX-08AE38A with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Science Mission Directorate, Planetary Astronomy Program. Infrared images from 1995-2000 are available from the Magnetospheres of the Outer Planets Infrared Data Archive.

History

Citation

Nature Astronomy, 2018

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Physics and Astronomy

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Nature Astronomy

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

eissn

2397-3366

Acceptance date

2018-05-24

Copyright date

2018

Available date

2019-01-23

Publisher version

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41550-018-0523-z

Notes

The data used in this study was originally released as the Magnetospheres of the Outer Planets Infrared Data Archive. It was recently re-archived (23) at https://dataverse.harvard.edu/dataverse/h3p and has the DOI: 10.7910/DVN/KVQWNJ;The file associated with this record is under embargo until 6 months after publication, in accordance with the publisher's self-archiving policy. The full text may be available through the publisher links provided above.

Editors

Maltagliati, L.

Language

en

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