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Energetic particles in the jovian magnetotail.
McNutt, R L; Haggerty, D K; Hill, M E; Krimigis, S M; Livi, S; Ho, G C; Gurnee, R S; Mauk, B H; Mitchell, D G; Roelof, E C; McComas, D J; Bagenal, F; Elliott, H A; Brown, L E; Kusterer, M; Vandegriff, J; Stern, S A; Weaver, H A; Spencer, J R; Moore, J M.
Affiliation
  • McNutt RL; Applied Physics Laboratory, Johns Hopkins University, Laurel, MD 20723, USA. ralph.mcnutt@jhuapl.edu
Science ; 318(5848): 220-2, 2007 Oct 12.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17932283
ABSTRACT
When the solar wind hits Jupiter's magnetic field, it creates a long magnetotail trailing behind the planet that channels material out of the Jupiter system. The New Horizons spacecraft traversed the length of the jovian magnetotail to >2500 jovian radii (RJ; 1 RJ identical with 71,400 kilometers), observing a high-temperature, multispecies population of energetic particles. Velocity dispersions, anisotropies, and compositional variation seen in the deep-tail (greater, similar 500 RJ) with a approximately 3-day periodicity are similar to variations seen closer to Jupiter in Galileo data. The signatures suggest plasma streaming away from the planet and injection sites in the near-tail region (approximately 200 to 400 RJ) that could be related to magnetic reconnection events. The tail structure remains coherent at least until it reaches the magnetosheath at 1655 RJ.
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Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Jupiter Language: En Journal: Science Year: 2007 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Estados Unidos
Search on Google
Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Jupiter Language: En Journal: Science Year: 2007 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Estados Unidos