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New Understanding of Mercury's Magnetosphere from MESSENGER'S First Flyby

Authors :
Slavin, James A
Acuna, Mario H
Anderson, Brian J
Baker, Daniel N
Benna, Mehdi
Gloeckler, George
Gold, Robert E
Ho, George C
Killen, M
Korth, Haje
Krimigis, Stamatios M
McNutt, Ralph L., Jr
Raines, James M
Schriver, David
Somomon, Sean C
Starr, Richard
Travnicek, Pavel
Zurbuchen, Thomas H
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2008.

Abstract

Observations by the MESSENGER spacecraft on 14 January 2008 have revealed new features of the solar system's smallest planetary magnetosphere. The interplanetary magnetic field orientation was unfavorable for large inputs of energy from the solar wind and no evidence of magnetic substorms, internal magnetic reconnection, or energetic particle acceleration was detected. Large-scale rotations of the magnetic field were measured along the dusk flank of the magnetosphere and ultra-tow frequency waves were frequently observed beginning near closest approach. Outbound the spacecraft encountered two current-sheet boundaries across which the magnetic field intensity decreased in a step-like manner. The outer current sheet is the magnetopause boundary. The inner current sheet is similar in structure, but weaker and -1000 km closer to the planet. Between these two current sheets the magnetic field intensity is depressed by the diamagnetic effect of planetary ions created by the photo-ionization of Mercury's exosphere.

Subjects

Subjects :
Geophysics

Details

Language :
English
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20080032512
Document Type :
Report