Literature DB >> 11875561

A pulsating auroral X-ray hot spot on Jupiter.

G R Gladstone1, J H Waite, D Grodent, W S Lewis, F J Crary, R F Elsner, M C Weisskopf, T Majeed, J-M Jahn, A Bhardwaj, J T Clarke, D T Young, M K Dougherty, S A Espinosa, T E Cravens.   

Abstract

Jupiter's X-ray aurora has been thought to be excited by energetic sulphur and oxygen ions precipitating from the inner magnetosphere into the planet's polar regions. Here we report high-spatial-resolution observations that demonstrate that most of Jupiter's northern auroral X-rays come from a 'hot spot' located significantly poleward of the latitudes connected to the inner magnetosphere. The hot spot seems to be fixed in magnetic latitude and longitude and occurs in a region where anomalous infrared and ultraviolet emissions have also been observed. We infer from the data that the particles that excite the aurora originate in the outer magnetosphere. The hot spot X-rays pulsate with an approximately 45-min period, a period similar to that reported for high-latitude radio and energetic electron bursts observed by near-Jupiter spacecraft. These results invalidate the idea that jovian auroral X-ray emissions are mainly excited by steady precipitation of energetic heavy ions from the inner magnetosphere. Instead, the X-rays seem to result from currently unexplained processes in the outer magnetosphere that produce highly localized and highly variable emissions over an extremely wide range of wavelengths.

Entities:  

Year:  2002        PMID: 11875561     DOI: 10.1038/4151000a

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  4 in total

1.  Jupiter's X-Ray and UV Dark Polar Region.

Authors:  W R Dunn; D M Weigt; D Grodent; Z H Yao; D May; K Feigelman; B Sipos; D Fleming; S McEntee; B Bonfond; G R Gladstone; R E Johnson; C M Jackman; R L Guo; G Branduardi-Raymont; A D Wibisono; R P Kraft; J D Nichols; L C Ray
Journal:  Geophys Res Lett       Date:  2022-06-07       Impact factor: 5.576

2.  The impact of an ICME on the Jovian X-ray aurora.

Authors:  William R Dunn; Graziella Branduardi-Raymont; Ronald F Elsner; Marissa F Vogt; Laurent Lamy; Peter G Ford; Andrew J Coates; G Randall Gladstone; Caitriona M Jackman; Jonathan D Nichols; I Jonathan Rae; Ali Varsani; Tomoki Kimura; Kenneth C Hansen; Jamie M Jasinski
Journal:  J Geophys Res Space Phys       Date:  2016-03-22       Impact factor: 2.811

3.  Jupiter's Low-Altitude Auroral Zones: Fields, Particles, Plasma Waves, and Density Depletions.

Authors:  A H Sulaiman; B H Mauk; J R Szalay; F Allegrini; G Clark; G R Gladstone; S Kotsiaros; W S Kurth; F Bagenal; B Bonfond; J E P Connerney; R W Ebert; S S Elliott; D J Gershman; G B Hospodarsky; V Hue; R L Lysak; A Masters; O Santolík; J Saur; S J Bolton
Journal:  J Geophys Res Space Phys       Date:  2022-08-22       Impact factor: 3.111

4.  High-Energy (>10 MeV) Oxygen and Sulfur Ions Observed at Jupiter From Pulse Width Measurements of the JEDI Sensors.

Authors:  J H Westlake; G Clark; D K Haggerty; S E Jaskulek; P Kollmann; B H Mauk; D G Mitchell; K S Nelson; C P Paranicas; A M Rymer
Journal:  Geophys Res Lett       Date:  2019-10-28       Impact factor: 4.720

  4 in total

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