Published February 24, 2023 | Version v1
Dataset Open

How Bi-Modal are Jupiter's Main Aurora Zones?

  • 1. Johns Hopkins APL
  • 2. Princeton University
  • 3. Southwest Research Institute
  • 4. University of Colorado, LASP
  • 5. NASA GSFC
  • 6. University of Iowa
  • 7. University of Minnesota

Description

Provided here are ASCII dumps of the processed data that appears in the figure of the subject paper, which is under review for publication by the American Geophysical Union’s Journal of Geophysical Research, Space Physics.  The PDF of the paper provided here serves to document the figures in question.  

 

How Bi-Modal are Jupiter’s Main Aurora Zones?

 

B. H. Mauk, J. R. Szalay, F. Allegrini, F. Bagenal, S. J. Bolton, G. Clark, J. E. P. Connerney, G. R. Gladstone, D. K. Haggerty, P. Kollmann, W. S. Kurth, C. P. Paranicas, A. H. Sulaiman

Key Points:

  • Zone I downward electron broadband acceleration sometimes has upward electrostatic potentials fully disappearing and other times enduring.
  • Zone I potentials of 30-360 kV often disappear to < 10 kV with strong broadband electrons having characteristic energies of 100-400 keV.
  • Why one process (electrostatic or broadband) is favored over the other at any one time remains unknown.

Abstract

Using Juno-measured >30 keV electrons, three regions with substantial UV emissions were identified previously for Jupiter’s main aurora (excluding the polar cap): low-latitude diffuse aurora, mid-latitude Zone I of downward acceleration, and higher latitude Zone II of bi-directional acceleration.  Zone I, associated with upward magnetic field-aligned currents, was represented as bimodal: sometimes supporting coherent downward electron electrostatic acceleration and sometimes downward electron broadband acceleration, with broadband acceleration usually delivering the most intense electron energy flux at Juno.  Recent observations of up-going ion beams within Zone I represent a challenge as to whether coherent electrostatic acceleration invariably accompanies broadband acceleration.  Is this region strictly bi-modal, or is there a continuum between these two modes? We address these questions by combining multiple ion and electron data sources to diagnose electrostatic potentials both above and below the spacecraft.   We find: 1) During Zone I downward electron broadband events, there are examples where evidence of downward electron electrostatic acceleration completely disappears and examples where it endures at some level. 2) Most often, evidence of downward electron electrostatic acceleration is strongly suppressed with strong downward electron broadband acceleration.  Residual potentials most often (not always) have values small (<10 kV) compared to the electron characteristic energies of 100-400 keV. 3) Care must be exercised in these studies because plasmasheet electron precipitation spectra can mimic broadband acceleration spectra.  At least for weaker auroral broadband accelerations, there is likely to be a continuum of electrostatic and broadband participation. Why either process is favored any one time is unknown.

 

Files

0_Mauk_2022_Zone_I_Bimodal_21Feb2023.pdf

Files (3.6 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:fc593e63c27f46ac0f876dd1ba8e59a0
3.4 MB Preview Download
md5:a09e5807308904a527b8241d573c186c
496 Bytes Preview Download
md5:64f87238bc75f30acc24c4863f0a4a19
13.4 kB Preview Download
md5:13949b05ec1bec593ed03a08731cb30c
22.3 kB Preview Download
md5:06a472328ba55b4f6e661610b6090a5e
11.2 kB Preview Download
md5:b9024e33ee141b2a656f364811026c56
32.9 kB Preview Download
md5:1223fef556321559ff19e963da810aeb
43.8 kB Preview Download
md5:926278901e0c4bf211a0ba47853c7c50
40.5 kB Preview Download
md5:83fbaa5fe8dd2714ec9d9792accc5275
33.1 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works