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The morphology of the topside ionosphere of Mars under different solar wind conditions: Results of a multi-instrument observing campaign by Mars Express in 2010

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journal contribution
posted on 2018-05-17, 09:18 authored by Paul Withers, M. Matta, M. Lester, D. Andrews, N. J. T. Edberg, H. Nilsson, H. Opgenoorth, S. Curry, R. Lillis, E. Dubinin, M. Fraenz, X. Hang, W. Kofman, L. Lei, D. Morgan, M. Paetzold, K. Peter, A. Opitz, J. A. Wild, O. Witasse
Since the internally-generated magnetic field of Mars is weak, strong coupling is expected between the solar wind, planetary magnetosphere, and planetary ionosphere. However, few previous observational studies of this coupling incorporated data that extended from the solar wind to deep into the ionosphere. Here we use solar wind, magnetosphere, and ionosphere data obtained by the Mars Express spacecraft during March/April 2010 to investigate this coupling. We focus on three case studies, each centered on a pair of ionospheric electron density profiles measured by radio occultations, where the two profiles in each pair were obtained from the same location at an interval of only a few days. We find that high dynamic pressures in the solar wind are associated with compression of the magnetosphere, heating of the magnetosheath, reduction in the vertical extent of the ionosphere, and abrupt changes in electron density at the top of the ionosphere. The first three of these associations are analogous to the behavior of the plasma environment of Venus, but the final one is not. These results reinforce the notion that changes in solar forcing influence the behaviors of all of the tightly coupled regions within the Martian plasma environment.

Funding

This work was stimulated by the meetings of the International Space Science Institute (ISSI) International Team “The induced magnetosphere of Mars: Physical processes and consequences”. We gratefully acknowledge ISSI for support and hospitality, the Mars Express project for conducting dedicated observing campaigns, the STEREO team for making their data publicly available, Dave Brain for access to field topology maps, and an anonymous reviewer for helpful comments. P.W. acknowledges funding from NASA Award NNX12AJ39G. D.J.A, N.J.T.E., and H.J.O. acknowledge funding from the Swedish National Space Board (SNSB). M.L. acknowledges support from STFC with Grant ST/K001000/1. A.O. acknowledges support from the Research Fellowship program at ESA ESTEC. The Mars Express Radio Science Experiment (MaRS) is funded by the German Space Agency (DLR) under Grant 50QM1401.

History

Citation

Planetary and Space Science, 2016, 120, pp. 24-34 (11)

Author affiliation

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

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Planetary and Space Science

Publisher

Elsevier

issn

0032-0633

Acceptance date

2015-10-28

Copyright date

2015

Available date

2018-05-17

Publisher version

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0032063315003189?via=ihub

Language

en