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Three‐dimensional plasma simulation of Io's interaction with the Io plasma torus: Asymmetric plasma flow

TLDR
In this paper, a three-dimensional, stationary, two-fluid plasma model for electrons and one ion species was developed to understand the local interaction of Io's atmosphere with the Io plasma torus and the formation of Io ionosphere.
Abstract
A three-dimensional, stationary, two-fluid plasma model for electrons and one ion species was developed to understand the local interaction of Io's atmosphere with the Io plasma torus and the formation of Io's ionosphere. Our model calculates, self-consistently, the plasma density, the velocity and the temperatures of the ions and electrons, and the electric field for a given neutral atmosphere and imposed Io plasma torus conditions but assumes for the magnetic field the constant homogeneous Jovian field. With only photoionization in a pure SO2 atmosphere it is impossible to correctly model the plasma measurements by the Galileo spacecraft. With collisional ionization and photoionization the observations can be successfully modeled when the neutral atmospheric column density is Ncol = 6 × 1020 m−2 and the atmospheric scale height is H = 100 km. The energy reservoir of the Io plasma torus provides via electron heat conduction the necessary thermal energy for the maintenance of the collisional ionization process and thus the formation of Io's ionosphere. Anisotropic conductivity is shown numerically as well as analytically to be essential to understand the convection patterns and current systems across Io. The electric field is very greatly reduced, because the ionospheric conductances far exceed the Alfven conductance ΣA, and also strongly twisted owing to the Hall effect. We find that the electric field is twisted by an analytic angle tan Θtwist = Σ2/(Σ1 + 2ΣA) from the anti-Jupiter direction toward the direction of corotation for constant values of the Pedersen and Hall conductances Σ1 and Σ2 within a circle encompassing Io's ionosphere. Because the electron velocity is approximately equal to the E × B drift velocity, the electron flow trajectories are twisted by the same angle toward Jupiter, with E and B the electric and magnetic fields, respectively. Since Σ1 ∼ Σ2, the electron flow is strongly asymmetric during convection across Io, and the magnitude of this effect is directly due to the Hall conductivity. In contrast, the ions are diverted slightly away from Jupiter when passing Io. Large electric currents flow in Io's ionosphere owing to these substantially different flow patterns for electrons and ions, and our calculations predict that a total electric current of 5 million A was carried in each Alfven wing during the Galileo flyby. We also find a total Joule heating rate dissipated in Io's ionosphere of P = 4.2 × 1011 W.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Ion chemistry in space

TL;DR: The gas-phase chemistry in extraterrestrial space that is driven by reactions with atomic and molecular ions is reviewed, not only the observation, distribution and reactions of ions in space, but also laboratory-based experimental and theoretical methods for studying these ions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Magnetic energy fluxes in sub-Alfvénic planet star and moon planet interactions

TL;DR: In this article, the Poynting flux near the obstacles of an obstacle to the central body was derived for sub-Alfvenic interaction and the energy fluxes were calculated near obstacles and thus likely present upper limits for the fluxes arriving at the center body.

Magnetospheric interactions with satellites

TL;DR: The magnetospheric plasma that approximately corotates with Jupiter has been studied in this article, where it is shown that the azimuthal speed at the orbits of the Galilean moons is faster than the orbital velocity of the moons, so the plasma flows over the moons from their trailing hemispheres and sweeps ahead of them in their orbital motion.
Journal ArticleDOI

Power transmission and particle acceleration along the Io flux tube

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that the Alfven waves need to be filamented by a turbulent cascade process and accelerate the electrons at high latitude in order to explain the observations and to form a consistent scheme of the Io-Jupiter interaction.

Plasma interaction of Io with its plasma torus

TL;DR: Io's plasma interaction with its torus is an exceptionally interesting case of magnetospheric plasma flowing past a body with a tenuous atmosphere as discussed by the authors, and major progress in our understanding of Io's interaction has occurred in the last 10 years based on the rich data sets acquired by the Galileo spacecraft in orbit around Jupiter with seven close flybys of Io supplemented by Earth-based remote-sensing observations of unprecedented resolution.
References
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Book

Physics and Chemistry of the Upper Atmosphere

M. H. Rees
TL;DR: In this article, the physics and chemistry of the Earth's upper atmosphere are discussed, which is bounded at the bottom by a pressure level at which most of the incoming ionizing radiation has been absorbed, and at the top by the level of gas escape.
Book

Energetic Charged-Particle Interactions with Atmospheres and Surfaces

TL;DR: A detailed overview of the effects produced by collision physics and collision physics can be found in this article, where the authors discuss the effects of collision physics on materials and their interaction with surfaces.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nonlinear standing Alfvén wave current system at Io: Theory

TL;DR: In this article, a nonlinear analytical model of the Alfven current tubes continuing the currents through Io (or rather its ionosphere) generated by the unipolar inductor effect due to Io's motion relative to the magnetospheric plasma was presented.
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