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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019-07-19
    Description: We propose a possible explanation for the second wake event observed by Cassini during the T9 encounter with Titan. As shown in Hartle and Sittler [2007a], ions will emanate from Titan's upper atmosphere as ion beams when the ion gyroradii are large compared to the neutral scale height. Furthermore, Sittler and Hartle [2007] and Hartle and Sittler [2007b] showed that when this condition is satisfied and the electric field of the external flow is not reduced significantly due to draping field lines, the heavier pickup ions will be highly localized in space and velocity, or beam-like, in Titan's wake. This can cause these ion bunches to jump across the spacecraft trajectory and not be observed except for the lighter ions such as H+ and H2+, which have smaller gyroradii. These heavy ions will form a large pickup current which can deflect the tail position away from Saturn. We will discuss this model for the T9 encounter, which was a wake pass, and also explore its possible application for T5.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Division of Planetary Sciences meeting; Oct 07, 2006 - Oct 13, 2006; Orlando, FL; United States
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-07-19
    Description: With the recent discovery of heavy ions, positive and negative, by the Cassini Plasma Spectrometer (CAPS) instrument in Titan's ionosphere, it reveals new possibilities for aerosol formation at Titan and the introduction of free oxygen to the aerosol chemistry from Saturn's magnetosphere with Enceladus as the primary oxygen source. One can estimate whether the heavy ions in the ionosphere are of sufficient number to account for all the aerosols, under what conditions are favorable for heavy ion formation and how they are introduced as seed particles deeper in Titan's atmosphere where the aerosols form and eventually find themselves on Titan's surface where unknown chemical processes can take place. Finally, what are the possibilities with regard to their chemistry on the surface with some free oxygen present in their seed particles?
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: International Space Science Institute Conference; Aug 27, 2007 - Aug 31, 2007; Bern; Switzerland
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-08-28
    Description: Attention is given to the deliberations of NASA's Earth Observing System (EOS) Science and Mission Requirements Working Group, which has addressed the requirements and prospects for low earth orbit sensor platforms in the 1990s. The proposed EOS network would link data users with mission data repositories. Three EOS instrument packages have been chosen on the basis of synergistic instrument groupings for making simultaneous observations of selected phenomena over a variety of wavelengths.
    Keywords: EARTH RESOURCES AND REMOTE SENSING
    Type: IEEE, Proceedings (ISSN 0018-9219); 73; 1025-103
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Composition and structure of neutral constituents in the lunar exosphere can be determined through measurements of phase space distributions of pickup ions borne from the exosphere [1]. An essential point made in an early study [ 1 ] and inferred by recent pickup ion measurements [2, 3] is that much lower neutral exosphere densities can be derived from ion mass spectrometer measurements of pickup ions than can be determined by conventional neutral mass spectrometers or remote sensing instruments. One approach for deriving properties of neutral exospheric source gasses is to first compare observed ion spectra with pickup ion model phase space distributions. Neutral exosphere properties are then inferred by adjusting exosphere model parameters to obtain the best fit between the resulting model pickup ion distributions and the observed ion spectra. Adopting this path, we obtain ion distributions from a new general pickup ion model, an extension of a simpler analytic description obtained from the Vlasov equation with an ion source [4]. In turn, the ion source is formed from a three-dimensional exospheric density distribution, which can range from the classical Chamberlain type distribution to one with variable exobase temperatures and nonthermal constituents as well as those empirically derived. The initial stage of this approach uses the Moon's known neutral He and Na exospheres to deriv e He+ and Na+ pickup ion exospheres, including their phase space distributions, densities and fluxes. The neutral exospheres used are those based on existing models and remote sensing studies. As mentioned, future ion measurements can be used to constrain the pickup ion model and subsequently improve the neutral exosphere descriptions. The pickup ion model is also used to estimate the exosphere sources of recently observed pickup ions on KAGUYA [3]. Future missions carrying ion spectrometers (e.g., ARTEMIS) will be able to study the lunar neutral exosphere with great sensitivity, yielding the necessary ion velocity spectra needed to further analysis of parent neutral exosphere properties.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: 2009 AGU Fall Meeting; Dec 14, 2009 - Dec 18, 2009; San Francisco, CA; United States
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-07-19
    Description: Convergence of suprathermal keV-MeV proton and ion spectra approximately to the Fisk-Gloeckler (F-G) form j(E) = j(sub 0) E(sup -1.5) in Voyager land 2 heliosheath measurements is suggestive of distributed acceleration in Kolmogorov turbulence which may extend well beyond the heliopause into the local interstellar medium (LISM). Turbulence of this type is already indicated by interstellar radio scintillation measurements of electron density power spectra. Previously published extrapolations (Cooper et al., 2003, 2006) of the LISM proton spectrum from eV to GeV energies are highly consistent with the F-G power-law and further indicative of such turbulence and LISM effectiveness of the F-G cascade acceleration process. The LISM pressure computed from this spectrum well exceeds that from current estimates for the LISM magnetic field, so exchange of energy between the protons and the magnetic field would likely have a strong role in evolution of the turbulence as per the F-G theory and as long ago proposed for cosmic ray energies by Parker and others. Pressure-dependent estimates of the LISM field strength should not ignore this potentially strong and even dominant contribution from the plasma. Presence of high-beta suprathermal plasma on LISM field lines could significantly affect interactions with the heliospheric outer boundary region and might potentially account for distributed and more discrete features in ongoing measurements of energetic neutral emission from the Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX) mission.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: 52nd Annual Meeting of the APS (American Physical Society) Div. of Plasma Physics; Nov 08, 2010 - Nov 12, 2010; Chicago, IL; United States
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-07-19
    Description: Using Cassini Plasma Spectrometer (CAPS) Ion Mass Spectrometer (IMS) measurements, we present the ion fluid properties and its ion composition of the upstream flow for Titan's interaction with Saturn's magnetosphere. A 3D ion moments algorithm is used which is essentially model independent with only requirement is that ion flow is within the CAPS IMS 2(pi) steradian field-of-view (FOV) and that the ion 'velocity distribution function (VDF) be gyrotropic. These results cover the period from TA flyby (2004 day 300) to T22 flyby (2006 363). Cassini's in situ measurements of Saturn's magnetic field show it is stretched out into a magnetodisc configuration for Saturn Local Times (SLT) centered about midnight local time. Under those circumstances the field is confined near the equatorial plane with Titan either above or below the magnetosphere current sheet. Similar to Jupiter's outer magnetosphere where a magnetodisc configuration applies, one expects the heavy ions within Saturn's outer magnetosphere to be confined within a few degrees of the current sheet while at higher magnetic latitudes protons should dominate. We show that when Cassini is between dusk-midnight-dawn local time and spacecraft is not within the current sheet that light ions (H, 142) tend to dominate the ion composition for the upstream flow. If true, one may expect the interaction between Saturn's magnetosphere, locally devoid of heavy ions and Titan's upper atmosphere and exosphere to be significantly different from that for Voyager 1, TA and TB when heavy ions were present in the upstream flow. We also present observational evidence for Saturn's magnetosphere interaction with Titan's extended H and H2 corona which can extend approx. 1 Rs from Titan.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: Magnetospheres of the Outer Planets (MOP) 2009; Jul 27, 2009 - Jul 31, 2009; Cologne; Germany
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