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Transcript
Injection, Interchange And Reconnection:
Energetic Particle Observations In Saturn's Magnetotail
D.G. Mitchell1, P. C. Brandt1, J.F. Carbary1, W.S. Kurth4, S.M. Krimigis1, C. Paranicas1, N.
Krupp2, D.C. Hamilton3, B.H. Mauk1, G.B. Hospodarsky4, M.K. Dougherty5, W. R. Pryor6
1
Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, Laurel, MD, USA
2
Max-Planck-Institut für Sonnensystemforschung, Katlenburg-Lindau, Germany
3
University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA
4
Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, USA
5
Blackett Laboratory, Imperial College, London, UK
6
Central Arizona College, Coolidge, AZ, USA
Submitted to Journal of Geophysical Research, August, 2013
1
Abstract
2
3
Saturn’s and Jupiter’s magnetotails comprise regions where most of the plasma from
4
internal sources ultimately escapes from the systems. The primary active plasma processes
5
involved in transport of plasma from where it is formed to the outer magnetosphere and
6
ultimately to the solar wind are flux tube interchange and reconnection. Both processes likely
7
produce phenomena that are labeled as “injections” because of their associated abrupt onsets in
8
increased intensities of energetic particles and in plasma heating. In Saturn’s magnetosphere
9
these processes may be important for transport and energization of plasma ions and electrons but
10
their signatures in the data are not always easily interpreted. We discuss how and where these
11
transport and energization processes may be recognized in energetic particle and ENA
12
observations in Saturn’s magnetosphere.
13
14
15
Introduction
16
17
There have been many papers written on the topic of particle injection at Saturn, at
18
Jupiter, and of course at Earth. In the following, we will not discuss the Earth at all, and in fact
19
will only go into detail regarding the phenomenology at Saturn, where the Cassini fields and
20
particles data, with support from UV and IR auroral imaging data, have provided a number of
21
well correlated measurements of injections. While we are not discussing Jupiter, many of
22
Saturn’s observations of injections likely inform the plasma and energetic particle observations
23
and phenomena at Jupiter as well.
24
25
The term “injection” has probably been used too loosely, which has led to some
26
confusion regarding what physics and which plasma dynamics are being described. In this paper
27
we will focus on two phenomena for which the term has been used, although even the two
28
described here may have multiple interpretations. These two flavors of injections are 1) those
29
interpreted to be the plasma heating manifestation of inward moving flux tubes associated with
30
the interchange instability, and 2) those interpreted as particle acceleration associated with the
31
planetward transport and heating of plasma in the a night side post-reconnection plasma
32
sheet/current disk. It may be argued that these two categorizations are not distinct from one
33
another because some regard the planetward transport and heating of plasma in flux tubes
34
associated with the post-reconnection plasma sheet as just another example of flux tube
35
interchange. We would argue against that interpretation, since in that case the transition to an
36
anomalous resistivity regime as the current sheet collapses is accompanied by development of
37
cross-sheet electric field that non-adiabatically energizes, heats, and transports the plasma
38
particles via ExB drift in the planetward direction. This is quite different from flux tube
39
interchange, in which the primary forces are buoyancy and field line tension, and the plasma is
3
40
heated primarily adiabatically. Of course, an electric field is associated with the motion of the
41
plasma planetward in this instance as well, but because the particles are for the most part
42
adiabatic, they do not gain energy directly from that electric field.
43
44
45
So, what do these two types of injections look like, both in energetic particles, and when
imaged remotely, in energetic neutral atoms (ENA)?
46
4
47
48
Observations
We will investigate the two types of injection through measurements of energetic ions
49
and electrons by the magnetospheric imaging instrument (MIMI) ion and neutral camera
50
(INCA), the MIMI low energy magnetospheric measurement system (LEMMS), and the MIMI
51
charge, energy and mass sensor (CHEMS); ENAs from INCA; magnetic fields from the fluxgate
52
magnetometer (MAG); and plasma waves from the radio and plasma wave science instrument
53
(RPWS). Descriptions of these instruments are given by Krimigis et al. (2004), Dougherty et al.
54
(2004), and Gurnett et al. (2004). These injections are readily identified in the thermal plasma
55
observed by the Cassini Plasma Sensor (CAPS) as well, but this paper is motivated by the
56
characterization of injections of energetic particles, and including the CAPS data is beyond the
57
scope of this work, and it will not be emphasized here. A complete treatment of particle
58
injections at Saturn would include CAPS data. Many papers have been written on interchange
59
injections at Saturn, and the signatures of such injections are very clear and well understood
60
[André et al., 2005; Burch et al., 2005; Hill et al., 2005; Chen and Hill, 2008; Kennelly et al.,
61
2013]. Fewer papers have appeared on plasma observations associated with current sheet
62
collapse, with most of the focus being on the tailward side of the reconnection region. One
63
exception in this latter category was described by Bunce et al., (2005). They discussed a plasma
64
heating event observed just after Cassini Saturn Orbit Injection (SOI) in July 2004.
65
66
Current sheet events, charged particles:
67
68
Figure 1 provides an overview, primarily of the energetic particle characteristics of the
69
SOI event. This event is typical of a current sheet event. Cassini encounters the injection fairly
70
far out at dipole L values between about 17 and 20. The bursty structure internal to the event
71
shows no significant energy dispersion, a common characteristic of the magnetosphere beyond
5
72
L~12-15 Rs, and energetic particles were accelerated to energies of several hundred keV. The
73
measured intensities at those energies were much higher than is typical for the outer
74
magnetosphere suprathermal particle population. Furthermore, the event’s particles show a
75
harder energy spectrum than even the inner magnetospheric suprathermal particle population,
76
excluding the durably trapped radiation belt ions and electrons.
77
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The composition of the ions in this event is the same as that of the thermal plasma, that is,
79
a mix of protons and oxygen. These particles were energized by a dynamic event that occurred
80
on the night side of the planet, possibly still taking place as it corotates over Cassini at about
81
0400LT. As suggested by Bunce et al. (2005), such events are probably the consequence of
82
nightside reconnection and plasmoid release into the tail, with the subsequent dipolarization and
83
collapse of the current disk central current sheet after the plasmoid was released and field line
84
tension was no longer balanced by the centrifugal force that had been exerted by the rotating cold
85
plasma. During this reconfiguration of the magnetic field an electric field is generated and the
86
particles are quickly energized. The energization is more efficient for the higher energy and
87
higher mass ions because their first adiabatic invariant is not conserved. This mechanism only
88
applies to the ions; the electrons are also energized, but because they ought to remain adiabatic
89
their energization must be through a different mechanism. Simple compression into a smaller
90
volume, as well as betatron acceleration, may account for at least some of the electron heating.
91
Plasmoid release and reconnection leaves behind the reconnected flux tubes containing hot but
92
very low density plasma. This entire, rather large region is left occupied by depleted flux tubes,
93
for which the corotational centrifugal forces are now much smaller than they were before the
94
plasmoid release.
95
96
6
97
Interchange injection events, charged particles:
98
99
Interchange events have been the subject of a great many studies, at Earth, Jupiter, and
100
especially at Saturn where they are thought to play the dominant role in radial plasma transport
101
in Saturn’s middle magnetosphere [e.g., Mauk et al., 2009]. Many others have written about
102
such events in considerable detail, and it is not the purpose of this work to repeat or review those
103
results [Burch et al., 2005; Hill et al., 2005; André et al., 2005, 2008; Leisner et al., 2005; Chen
104
and Hill, 2008; Rymer et al. 2009; Kennelly et al., 2013]. Mauk et al., (2005), Paranicas et al.,
105
(2007), and Muller et al., (2010) discussed the dispersion of energetic particles as these events
106
age and disperse via gradient and curvature drifts relative to the cold sub-corotating plasma. We
107
will not extend those detailed treatments here, but rather we will attempt to distinguish these
108
events from the current sheet collapse injections introduced above. Figure 2 details several large
109
scale interchange events as they appear in energetic ions and electrons as well as the magnetic
110
field.
111
112
The events highlighted in Figure 2 are very recent flux tube interchange events. Older
113
events are characterized by dispersed energies quite easy to spot in an energetic particle
114
spectrogram—the sweeping contours for which the peak intensity decreases in energy with
115
increasing time seen in each of the 4 lower panels of Figure 2 are just such “old” interchange
116
events. The vertical features with sharply defined boundaries are good examples of “new”
117
interchange events. In the bottom panel, it is also evident that there is very little in the way of
118
dispersed injection events beyond L=15. Examination of other periapsis passes by Cassini
119
reveals this boundary to move around a bit; it can be encountered anywhere between about L =
120
10 and L = 18, with a typical value being about L=12.
121
7
122
These new events, unlike the old, dispersed events, have very well defined boundaries
123
both in particle intensities and in magnetic field strength. The magnetic field signature is as
124
expected for a near-equatorial interchange flux tube, in that the field interior to the event is larger
125
in magnitude and visibly quieter as well, with much less variability in strength than the field in
126
the surrounding medium. This magnetic field behavior is in direct contrast to the
127
diamagnetically depressed, highly variable field characteristic of the current sheet collapse event
128
in Figure 1. Furthermore, whereas the field external to the interchange flux tubes clearly shows
129
the radial gradient in the field magnitude as the spacecraft moves outward along its orbit, the
130
field internal to each interchange flux tube is basically flat, with no indication of a radial
131
gradient.
132
133
Inside the interchange flux tubes, the energetic particles have been energized far more
134
efficiently in the direction perpendicular to the magnetic field than in the parallel direction. The
135
protons accelerated perpendicular to the magnetic field in the events reach energies of about 200
136
keV, whereas those in directions closer to parallel reach only about 30 keV. More curiously, as
137
noted by Paranicas et al., Fall AGU, 2008 the dispersed energetic protons from older events
138
apparently have direct, unimpeded access to these newly interchanged flux tubes. Examining
139
either the 35° or the 145° pitch angle particles in the three events between 0430 and 0530, it
140
would appear that these gradient and curvature drifting ions are virtually unaffected by the flux
141
tubes’ presence. This may be a gyroradius dependent effect, explained in Figure 3. The faint
142
drifting electron event in the lower panel of Figure 3, most prominent in the energetic electrons
143
between 200 and 300keV, seems to have moved to slightly higher energy within the flux tubes.
144
This would indicate that these “new” flux tubes have actually been at the L-shell of the drifting
145
ions for sufficient time that they have drifted onto the flux tube field. However, if that is the
8
146
case, it is difficult to understand how the ions accelerated at near 90° pitch angle have remained
147
confined to the flux tube as effectively as they seem to be. So, this is a bit of a mystery.
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The ion intensities measured by LEMMS between 40 keV and 100 keV perpendicular to
150
the magnetic field in these interchange flux tubes ranges between 103 and 104 (cm2-s-sr-keV)-1,
151
as compared with 102 to 103 (cm2-s-sr-keV)-1 for the ion intensity in the current sheet collapse
152
injection in Figure 1. However outside the interchange flux tubes, the ambient energetic ion
153
intensity in the same energy range falls to 1 to 2 orders of magnitude lower such that a volume
154
average intensity in the region may be either higher or lower than the average intensity in the
155
current sheet collapse injection, for which the accelerated ions fill the volume fairly uniformly.
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Discussion:
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These two kinds of injection events (current sheet collapse and flux tube interchange)
160
both accelerate charged particles to high energies, both transport magnetic flux tubes containing
161
low plasma density radially inward, and both are consequences of the requirement for Saturn’s
162
rotating magnetosphere to rid itself of the stresses induced by cold plasma whose source is near
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Enceladus. In the inner to middle magnetosphere, the magnetic field is sufficiently strong that
164
the centrifugal force of the rotating cold plasma does not distort it greatly, the azimuthal current
165
associated with the cold plasma angular momentum is weak, and the field remains nearly dipolar.
166
Still, the rotating plasma exerts a radial force, and unloaded flux tubes outside this region are
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“light” (the magnetic field tension is not offset by the cold plasma centrifugal force) and so
168
conditions are ripe for flux tube interchange. The process results in a slightly more dipolar field
169
on the light flux tubes that have participated in interchange, and the outward displacement of the
9
170
loaded flux tubes. Again, much has been written on this topic, and it is not our intention to
171
expand upon it here.
172
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Current sheet collapse and the accompanying processes that accelerate plasma both
174
adiabatically and non-adiabatically are expected responses to plasmoid release in the tail. As the
175
loaded flux tubes move farther out in the magnetosphere through interchange motion, the field
176
magnitude decreases until a point is reached where the dipolar field gives way to a stretched field
177
dominated by the azimuthal equatorial current sheet. This current sheet is continuous from about
178
L = 7 out to the magnetopause (e.g., Connerney et al. 1983; Bunce et al., 2007) and both the
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centrifugal (inertial) current and particle pressure gradients contribute to the total current (Mauk
180
et al., 2009; Sergis et al. 2007; Kellet et al., 2010). According to the mechanism put forward by
181
Vasyliunas (1983), as the rotating plasma moves farther from the planet a point is reached when
182
the field tension can no longer balance the inertial force of the plasma. The field will then
183
reconnect across the current disk current sheet, and the cold plasma will be released tailward in a
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plasmoid (this does not occur on the dayside, because the solar wind pressure helps confine the
185
plasma within the magnetopause in the dayside outer magnetosphere).
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When the plasmoid has been released, the tension in the reconnected field lines (still
188
stretched) is no longer balanced by plasma centrifugal force, and they begin to snap back toward
189
the planet. Their plasma content has been greatly reduced by the plasmoid release, but there will
190
remain whatever plasma they contained in their off-equatorial extensions before reconnection
191
took place. The current that separates the field reversal between the northern and southern
192
hemispheres must collapse in this dipolarization process, and as it does so a self-consistent
193
electric field is generated in the current sheet region that can accelerate the plasma that remains
10
194
on the planetward retreating flux tubes. It is this heated plasma that we associate with the first
195
type of event discussed above, namely, the current sheet collapse events.
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As an aside, we would like to point out that the plasmoid released during this process
198
may or may not retreat quickly tailward. Following reconnection of the last closed field line,
199
conditions for continued reconnection involving open lobe magnetic flux may or may not
200
prevail. If reconnection of open flux does proceed, then the field line tension associated with the
201
newly reconnected open flux whose other connection is to the solar wind will exert tension in the
202
tailward direction on the plasmoid, accelerating it tailward (the classical concept of plasmoid
203
behavior). However, if lobe reconnection does not proceed, then the plasmoid (which, after all,
204
was released because of the centrifugal force exerted by the rotation of the cold heavy plasma
205
contained within it) as a whole will not experience a tailward force. The planetward portion may
206
move tailward in response to the stretched fields there, but the bulk of the plasma should
207
experience no new forces on it, and so will not accelerate tailward, but rather maintain constant
208
velocity in the direction it was already moving, which is primarily tangent to the azimuthal
209
trajectory it was recently describing. This being the case, the signature of such a recently
210
released plasmoid will be difficult to distinguish from the general flow of the plasma throughout
211
the tail. Eventually such a plasmoid will move tailward; if it was released near the dusk flank,
212
then by the time it travels across the tail it will have acquired a significant tailward component to
213
its velocity. A plasmoid released post midnight would presumably travel into the dawn side
214
magnetopause and eventually be picked up in the low latitude boundary and/or the sheath flow.
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The two types of events (current sheet collapse and interchange) are thus generally
217
located in different regions. Flux tube interchange takes place primarily in the inner and middle
218
magnetosphere where the magnetic field is quasi-dipolar, and buoyancy drives the instability.
11
219
Current sheet collapse takes place primarily in the outer magnetosphere, and the unopposed field
220
line tension that results after a plasmoid is released through reconnection drives the instability,
221
likely similar to the bursty bulk flow process in Earth’s magnetosphere.
222
223
However, the two types of events are very likely connected. When a plasmoid is released
224
in the tail and the current sheet collapses, the flux tubes returning planetward contain only a
225
tenuous, hot plasma. This planetward propagation will stop when the dipolarizing flux tubes
226
reach the already existing dipolar region inside about 12 Rs (in much the same way the bursty
227
bulk flows stop at the dipolar region of Earth’s field). This situation is a perfect set-up for flux
228
tube interchange. The rather large region of reconnected, light flux tubes now sits just radially
229
outward from the inner region, which is still loaded with cold, dense plasma. Buoyancy forces
230
will be therefore strongest just at the longitude where the plasmoid release and current sheet
231
collapse have occurred (of course, everything will continue to rotate azimuthally, driven by the
232
ionosphere). Flux tube interchange is therefore most likely to happen in a (rotating) longitudinal
233
sector where plasmoid release has just taken place, and the two types of events will therefore be,
234
at least to some extent, correlated. This is not to say that one will not happen without the other,
235
but there should be a greater probability for flux tube interchange following current sheet
236
collapse.
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Conversely, if flux tube interchange is already proceeding in the inner to middle
239
magnetosphere at a particular (rotating) longitude, then cold plasma is being efficiently
240
transported radially outward at that longitude. This could lead directly to plasmoid release at that
241
longitude, since the enhanced outward transport of cold plasma will more quickly load the outer,
242
stretched field with even more cold plasma, leading more imminently to reconnection and
243
plasmoid release at that longitude.
12
244
245
246
247
Energetic Neutral Atom (ENA) Injections:
248
249
A primary reason for this contribution to the conference is to use it as a platform for
250
clearing up confusion regarding ENA observations of Saturn’s magnetosphere. Again, in ENA
251
observations abrupt brightenings are often referred to as injections, and bright intensifications in
252
general as “blobs”. Here, we will relate these observations to the two injections types discussed
253
above.
254
255
As the current sheet collapses, injections of charged particles are generally encountered
256
in the outer magnetosphere, so it is in the outer magnetosphere that we would expect to see the
257
ENA emissions from such events. Indeed, there is such a class of event seen in ENA, with quite
258
repeatable characteristics that fit very well the current sheet collapse scenario.
259
260
Figure 4 presents ENA images from January 22, 2009. Cassini was at about 14 Rs just
261
post noon, and at 62 degrees latitude. This vantage point provides a good view of the night side
262
of Saturn’s magnetosphere out to beyond the orbit of Titan (the outermost dashed contour). The
263
large image shows a time integration of the ENA flux over an 8 minute span from 0624 to 0632
264
UT for neutral hydrogen energies between 55 and 90 keV. The image shows a localized bright
265
emission region very close to midnight local time. This is a fairly typical location for the onset
266
of current sheet collapse events as seen in ENA, but they can initially appear any place between
267
this local time and about the dawn meridian, and from about 15 Rs to just beyond Titan’s orbit.
13
268
Regardless of where they first appear, they always rotate in the direction of the general
269
magnetospheric corotational flow.
270
271
Above the large image in Figure 4 we have included 6 smaller images of the ENA
272
emission at slightly lower energy, between 24 and 55 keV, spanning the time between about
273
0350 and 0810UT. This sequence shows the progression from a weak but increasing emission
274
just post midnight and centered near 10 Rs in the first frame to a more well-developed, spread
275
out emission at 10 Rs that is rotating toward dawn. By the third upper panel a new brightening at
276
midnight and beyond 20 Rs appears in juxtaposition with the 10 Rs emission. The fourth panel
277
is centered very close to the time of the main large image. From this we can see that the relative
278
intensity of the new midnight enhancement beyond 20 Rs and the rotating event centered near 10
279
Rs is quite different at the two energies. At 55-90 keV, the 10 Rs emission is much weaker than
280
the outer midnight feature, whereas at 24-55 keV the two are comparable in intensity. To
281
understand this difference, it is important to bear in mind how the ENA observation comes
282
about. It is the line of sight integration of the charge exchange product between the local neutral
283
gas density and the energetic ion intensity, at the particular pitch angle that corresponds to the
284
intersection of the line of sight with the local magnetic field. Given the high latitude of Cassini’s
285
location during this sequence, the ENA emission is generated by ions with pitch angles closer to
286
field aligned than field perpendicular. From Figure 2 we can see that the ion acceleration for
287
pitch angles within 30° or 40° of the magnetic field extends only to roughly 30 keV, whereas
288
perpendicular to the field it extends to over 200 keV. So with our closer-to-parallel pitch angle
289
vantage point for the images in Figure 4, flux tube interchange events would be expected to drop
290
to relatively lower intensities at higher energies than would current sheet collapse events, for
291
which the acceleration (or at least the observed distribution) is relatively independent of pitch
292
angle, presumably as a consequence of pitch angle scattering in the weak, fluctuating magnetic
14
293
field. And that is what is observed—the relative brightness of the two areas of emission at high
294
energies favors the outer region (current sheet collapse), while they are more nearly equal at the
295
lower energies.
296
297
This is not to say that the in situ ion intensities are equal for the two types of events, for the two
298
regions. The outer region would be expected to have higher volume-averaged ion intensity by
299
virtue of the fact that the neutral gas density is lower at greater radial distances, so for the line of
300
sight integral of the ENA flux to be comparable in value the ion intensity must be higher.
301
However, from Cassini’s distance the ENA imager does not resolve structure at the angular size
302
of an interchange flux tube and so the ENA brightness again reflects the average ENA intensity
303
from the region. So the ion intensities within the interchange flux tubes could easily be
304
comparable to or higher than the ion intensities in the current sheet collapse events (at about 25
305
to 40 keV), and still the volume average over the ENA imager’s resolution element could be
306
lower. A lower average ion intensity combined with a higher neutral gas density can result in
307
nearly equal ENA intensities from the two regions.
308
309
A clear example of a current sheet collapse event in relative isolation was presented in
310
Mitchell et al. (2005, their Figures 2 and 3), who attributed it to current sheet disruption and
311
showed a close correspondence with the onset and development of a particularly intense Saturn
312
kilometric radiation (SKR) event. That event was characteristically dispersionless in energy, and
313
showed a fast rise in both hydrogen and oxygen over a range of energies. In Hill et al. (2008) a
314
similar event was closely associated with the release of a fast tailward propagating plasmoid
315
observed by Cassini at 44 Rs and 0300 LT in the magnetotail. Another example from Mitchell et
316
al. (2009, their Figure 8) documents the association between an injection event (probably
317
involving both current sheet collapse and interchange) and a solar wind pressure enhancement,
15
318
SKR enhancement, and dawn auroral brightening. Another event from that same work (their
319
Figure 7) again associates an event that likely includes both current sheet collapse and
320
interchange with a strong SKR enhancement and a well associated, rotating dawn side auroral
321
bulge.
322
323
Examples of especially well localized versions of the inner, interchange types of events
324
have been associated with discrete, rotating auroral features (Radioti et al., 2013). Figure 5
325
shows a keogram comparing of the auroral observations of UVIS to the ENA observations of
326
INCA, showing that the auroral features and the associated ENA emissions track each other very
327
closely in local time over
328
329
Of the two types of injections discussed above, the inner-to-middle magnetosphere
330
interchange type of injection is by far the more common. It is rare that an ENA imaging
331
sequence of a full rotation of Saturn goes by without at least one such event at some intensity
332
occurring. During more active times, it is not uncommon for up to three such regions to be active
333
simultaneously (for example, in Figure 5, above), rotating in the corotation direction and
334
typically intensifying as they rotate through the dusk meridian, through midnight, and dimming
335
again at dawn. The current sheet collapse events in the outer magnetosphere are infrequent, and
336
are often (although based on scanty statistics) associated with solar wind compression events.
337
There is some evidence that the interchange events are also more common and more intense
338
during solar wind compressions, although that relationship has not been well established.
339
340
Although the association between ENA observations of rotating features and interchange
341
events above is made through inference, we do have an example for which the ENA images of
342
such an event are validated by direct observation of the same interchange events that produce the
16
343
imaged ENA emission. In Figure 6a we show another example of a series of three interchange
344
events, seen on day 301, 2004 during an inbound equatorial Cassini orbit near noon local time.
345
Although later in the mission INCA was typically run in ion mode for this orbital geometry, for
346
this pass INCA was in ENA mode, and was able to obtain a sequence of ENA images beginning
347
about 6 hours before the events passed over the spacecraft, and extending until 4 hours after the
348
events had rotated past Cassini (see the inset in 6a for the orbital geometry). In Figure 6b we
349
present the INCA ENA images. As the text annotation of the individual images indicates, each
350
of the ENA images corresponds quite naturally with the motion of the observed interchange
351
events from an initial position on Saturn’s night side, through dawn and over the spacecraft just
352
post noon, finally retreating through dusk back to the night side. The time progression of the
353
INCA images is just what would be expected for a high energetic ion intensity set of flux tubes
354
rotating about Saturn at close to corotation speed at about 10Rs, and gives us confidence in
355
making the association between similar interchange events and the high inclination image
356
sequences of rotating features seen near 10 Rs.
357
358
Relationship with Saturn kilometric radiation.
359
360
The current sheet collapse events of the outer magnetosphere are usually accompanied by
361
some enhancement in Saturn kilometric radiation (SKR), which is radio emission from ~10 kHz
362
to ~1500 kHz (Lamy et al., 2008). In Figure 7 we display RPWS electric field plasma wave
363
power spectrograms from 3 to 3000 kHz for two period of interest. The upper panel is for 11
364
through 13 January of 2009, the lower panel from a period 10 days later, 21 through 22 January
365
2009. Both were high latitude intervals with good ENA imaging from Cassini, the second of
366
which was the subject of Figure 4 and its discussion. This frequency band fully contains the
367
SKR emission, and it also contains periodic bursts of narrow band emission, generally below but
17
368
overlapping in frequency with the SKR at times. Horizontal yellow boxes identify the narrow
369
band emission in the range between about 4 and 7 kHz in each interval.
370
371
For the ENA image emissions previously discussed in Figure 4, as well as for images
372
from a very similar event viewed by INCA in ENA from January 11 through 13, 2009, Figure 8
373
compares integrated ENA intensity at 25-55 keV neutral hydrogen (red) and at 55-90keV neutral
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hydrogen (blue) to the frequency-integrated SKR power from Figure 7 between 10 and 30 kHz.
375
The ENA fluxes have been corrected for slant viewing and integrated between 14-25 RS, which
376
is intended to capture the outer, current sheet collapse events. The RPWS power has been
377
normalized to 20 RS to correct for spacecraft range changes during the time interval.
378
One notices a rough correspondence in comparing the ENA and RPWS curves. During
379
the 11-13 period (top) the strongest ENA enhancements at both energies correspond quite closely
380
with the abrupt increases in 10-30kHz SKR power (the dashed lines correspond to interpolated
381
intervals during which the 10-30 kHz SKR was not present, but the band was bright from the
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narrow band wave power). Likewise the largest ENA enhancement between 22.2 days and 22.5
383
days agrees with the largest SKR enhancement during the same approximate interval (this
384
interval did not have significant narrow band power within the 10-30 kHz band). The ENA and
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SKR profiles do not exactly match, of course, and this should not be expected owing to the rather
386
crude way in which the integrations are performed.
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In Figure 9 we compare estimates of the RPWS narrow band power within the yellow
389
boxes drawn in the spectrograms in Figure 7 with the ENA intensity between 25 and 55 keV,
390
integrated over the distance range from 5 to 14 Rs. Here we can see that on both days, the
391
narrow band emission power estimate quite closely follows the ENA intensity in this radial
18
392
distance range. This suggests that the two are closely related, and presumably through a
393
common cause of the interchange instability.
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395
Conclusions
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We have demonstrated through several case studies that there exist two types of energetic
398
particle injection mechanisms at Saturn. The first type consists of the centrifugal interchange
399
instability in which hot tenuous plasma radially interchanges with cold dense plasma as a result
400
of centrifugal forces, and the second type consists of current sheet collapse, probably following
401
plasmoid formation and release caused by stretching of the field in the magnetotail by centrifugal
402
force exerted by corotating cold plasma. The first type of injection occurs in the inner
403
magnetosphere (L<12-15) and can occur at any local time, although in ENA it is typically
404
stronger on the night side, while the second type occurs in the outer magnetosphere and occurs
405
primarily in the midnight-to-dawn sector. Each type of injection can be recognized by its
406
signature in energetic particles and energetic neutrals, and can be corroborated by corresponding
407
signatures in magnetic fields and characrteristic radio emissions.
408
19
409
Acknowledgements
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This research was supported in part by the NASA Office of Space Science under Task
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Order 003 of contract NAS5-97271 between NASA Goddard Space flight Center and the Johns
413
Hopkins University. The research at The University of Iowa is supported by the National
414
Aeronautics and Space Administration through Contract 1279973 with the Jet Propulsion
415
Laboratory.
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Figure Captions
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Figure 1. “Typical” current sheet collapse injection event. The lower two panels show MIMI
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LEMMS electron (upper) and ion (lower) spectrograms from just after Cassini SOI. More detail
526
on this event regarding suprathermal particle populations appears above these lower panels. The
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top panel shows magnetic field magnitude, which exhibits irregular variations, and is generally
528
diamagnetically depressed relative to the surrounding medium. The second panel shows electron
529
energy flux from 100 eV to 500 keV, derived by combining data from the CAPS ELS and the
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MIMI LEMMS sensors. Note that the energy density peaks in the energy range between 10 and
531
100 keV. There is evidence for remnants of the cold plasma population in filaments where the
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electron energy density extends down to 100eV or less. The third panel from the top shows
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energetic ion energy flux from LEMMS. Ion pitch angle anisotropies (insets) are displayed for
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specific times at the top of the spectrogram. The open, egg-shaped patterns are characteristic of
535
plasma convection in the usual, azimuthal (corotational) direction. The diagonal shapes are the
536
characteristic of fast planetward convective flow. The energetic ions are a mix of energetic
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protons and O+, as determined by the MIMI CHEMS sensor. For brevity we show only O+
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between 50 and 230 keV as measured by telescope 3 from CHEMS, the telescope that for this
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spacecraft attitude records planetward flowing ions. The plasma flows as determined by the
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LEMMS and CHEMS ion anisotropy measurements are primarily in the azimuthal (corotation)
541
direction, with a couple of short intervals of strong planetward flow (especially between 0630
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and 0640).
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Figure 2. “Typical” flux tube interchange injections in energetic particles. The bottom panel
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covers from 0000UT on day 80, 2006 to 1800UT on day 81, featuring many ion injections, both
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new (vertical, non-dispersed features) and older, dispersed injections (leaning to the left at higher
26
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energies). In the panels above, the interval between 0400 and 0800 on day 80 is expanded,
548
revealing several interesting features. The top panel shows the Bz (dominant) component of the
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magnetic field, the second panel shows energetic electrons. In that panel, the high intensities at
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low energies decreasing between 0400 and 0500 result from sunlight background in the LEMMS
551
electron telescope, and should be ignored. The following three panels display proton intensities
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at 3 different pitch angles. From this it can be readily seen that the energetic particle
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energization inside the interchange flux tubes is strongly pitch angle dependent.
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Figure 3. Energetic ions (top panel) and electrons (bottom panel, energy scale inverted) as seen
556
by LEMMS, which is situated very close to 90° in pitch angle throughout this period. The high
557
intensity at low energy in the left corner is sunlight interference.
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Figure 4. ENA image in 55-90 keV Hydrogen at the onset of a current sheet collapse event. In
560
the row of smaller images at the top, the progression of the event is shown in 24-55 keV H.
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There is ENA emission in the midnight to pre-morning LT region at about 10Rs (the orbits of
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Titan at 20 Rs, Rhea at 8.7 Rs, and Dione at 6.25 Rs are included for reference), with much
563
stronger emission centered near midnight, a bit beyond Titan’s orbit, beginning at about 0630
564
UT.
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Figure 5. Keogram of UVIS auroral intensity between 16° and 20° colatitude (upper panels) and
567
INCA ENA intensity between 5 and 15 Rs (lower panels). The colored diagonal lines are
568
repeated above and below to guide the eye. The slope of the diagonal reflects the rotation
569
angular velocity for each feature. The slopes are not identical, indicating different rotation
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angular velocities for different pairs of features. Overall, the ENA and UV features are quite
571
closely linked by common local times, as concluded in Radioti et al. [2013].
27
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Figure 6a. Example of three consecutive interchange events seen on day 301, 2004. The
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CHEMS sensor measured the energetic protons in these events, which show some energy
575
dispersion consistent with the fact that they have aged several hours since they were freshly
576
injected. The inset in the upper left shows Cassini’s orbital geometry. The three interchange
577
events are shown schematically at three different locations as they rotate about Saturn near 10Rs,
578
from the night side through noon and back through dusk. The orbits of Rhea and Dione are
579
included for reference. Cassini’s orbit is close to Saturn’s equatorial plane, and during the data
580
interval shown was inbound between about 12 and 10 Saturn radii, moving from near noon to
581
about 1300LT.
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583
Figure 6b. ENA images from Cassini acquired before, during and after the measurement of the
584
three interchange events shown in Figure 6a. This sequence demonstrates directly the
585
correspondence between ENA images of rotating features near 10 Rs and observed interchange
586
events.
587
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Fig. 7. Comparisons of integrated INCA ENA fluxes for 14-25 RS with RPWS power integrated
589
over the 10-30 kHz SKR waveband for the events discussed previously for 11-14 January 2009
590
(top) and 21-23 January 2009 (bottom). The red traces represent integrations of 25-55 keV ENA
591
fluxes, while the blue traces represent 55-90 keV ENA fluxes. The SKR power has been
592
normalized to 20 RS after correction for spacecraft range.
593
28
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Figures
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Fig. 1
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Fig. 2.
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Fig. 3.
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606
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Fig. 4.
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Fig. 5.
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615
33
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Fig. 6
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Fig. 7.
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Fig 8.
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Fig. 9
37