TY - JOUR
T1 - Jupiter's Low‐Altitude Auroral Zones: Fields, Particles, Plasma Waves, and Density Depletions
AU - Sulaiman, A. H.
AU - Mauk, B. H.
AU - Szalay, J. R.
AU - Allegrini, F.
AU - Clark, G.
AU - Gladstone, G. R.
AU - Kotsiaros, S.
AU - Kurth, W. S.
AU - Bagenal, F.
AU - Bonfond, B.
AU - Connerney, J. E. P.
AU - Ebert, R. W.
AU - Elliott, S. S.
AU - Gershman, D. J.
AU - Hospodarsky, G. B.
AU - Hue, V.
AU - Lysak, R. L.
AU - Masters, A.
AU - Santolík, O.
AU - Saur, J.
AU - Bolton, S. J.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - The Juno spacecraft's polar orbits have enabled direct sampling of
Jupiter's low-altitude auroral field lines. While various data sets have
identified unique features over Jupiter's main aurora, they are yet to
be analyzed altogether to determine how they can be reconciled and fit
into the bigger picture of Jupiter's auroral generation mechanisms.
Jupiter's main aurora has been classified into distinct “zones”, based
on repeatable signatures found in energetic electron and proton spectra.
We combine fields, particles, and plasma wave data sets to analyze
Zone-I and Zone-II, which are suggested to carry upward and downward
field-aligned currents, respectively. We find Zone-I to have
well-defined boundaries across all data sets. H+ and/or H3+ cyclotron waves are commonly observed in Zone-I in the presence of energetic upward H+
beams and downward energetic electron beams. Zone-II, on the other
hand, does not have a clear poleward boundary with the polar cap, and
its signatures are more sporadic. Large-amplitude solitary waves, which
are reminiscent of those ubiquitous in Earth's downward current region,
are a key feature of Zone-II. Alfvénic fluctuations are most prominent
in the diffuse aurora and are repeatedly found to diminish in Zone-I and
Zone-II, likely due to dissipation, at higher altitudes, to energize
auroral electrons. Finally, we identify significant electron density
depletions, by up to 2 orders of magnitude, in Zone-I, and discuss their
important implications for the development of parallel potentials,
Alfvénic dissipation, and radio wave generation.
AB - The Juno spacecraft's polar orbits have enabled direct sampling of
Jupiter's low-altitude auroral field lines. While various data sets have
identified unique features over Jupiter's main aurora, they are yet to
be analyzed altogether to determine how they can be reconciled and fit
into the bigger picture of Jupiter's auroral generation mechanisms.
Jupiter's main aurora has been classified into distinct “zones”, based
on repeatable signatures found in energetic electron and proton spectra.
We combine fields, particles, and plasma wave data sets to analyze
Zone-I and Zone-II, which are suggested to carry upward and downward
field-aligned currents, respectively. We find Zone-I to have
well-defined boundaries across all data sets. H+ and/or H3+ cyclotron waves are commonly observed in Zone-I in the presence of energetic upward H+
beams and downward energetic electron beams. Zone-II, on the other
hand, does not have a clear poleward boundary with the polar cap, and
its signatures are more sporadic. Large-amplitude solitary waves, which
are reminiscent of those ubiquitous in Earth's downward current region,
are a key feature of Zone-II. Alfvénic fluctuations are most prominent
in the diffuse aurora and are repeatedly found to diminish in Zone-I and
Zone-II, likely due to dissipation, at higher altitudes, to energize
auroral electrons. Finally, we identify significant electron density
depletions, by up to 2 orders of magnitude, in Zone-I, and discuss their
important implications for the development of parallel potentials,
Alfvénic dissipation, and radio wave generation.
U2 - 10.1029/2022JA030334
DO - 10.1029/2022JA030334
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 36247326
SN - 0148-0227
VL - 127
JO - Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics
JF - Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics
IS - 8
M1 - e2022JA030334
ER -