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Nanodust detection with Cassini CDA - Implications for DESTINY+ and Interstellar Probe

Authors :
Veerle Sterken
Heiko Strack
Jon K. Hillier
Georg Moragas-Klostermeyer
Sascha Kempf
Sean Hsu
Masanori Kobayashi
Harald Krueger
Jonas Simolka
Ralf Srama
Zoltan Sternovsky
Anna Mocker
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Copernicus GmbH, 2021.

Abstract

The Cosmic Dust Analyzer (CDA) onboard Cassini characterized successfully the dust environment at Saturn from 2004 to 2017. Besides the study of Saturn’s E ring and its interaction with the embedded moons, CDA detected nanoparticles in the outer Saturn system moving on unbound orbits and originating primarily from Saturn’s E-ring. Although the instrument was built to detect micron and sub-micron sized particles, nano-sized grains were detected during the flyby at early Jupiter and in the outer environment at Saturn. Fast dust particles with sizes below 10 nm were measured by in-situ impact ionization and mass spectra were recorded. What are the limits of in-situ hypervelocity impact detection and what can be expected with current high-resolution mass spectrometers as flown onboard the missions DESTINY+ or EUROPA? Is the sensitivity of Dust Telescopes sufficient to detect nano-diamonds in interstellar space? This presentation summarizes the current experience of in-situ dust detectors and gives a prediction for future missions. In summary, current Dust Telescopes with integrated high-resolution mass spectrometers are more sensitive than the CASSINI Cosmic Dust Analyzer.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........5c1264795aeb9247afa8acf2887151f5