Abstract

Measurements of the hot (electron and ion energies >/=20 and >/= 28 kiloelectron volts, respectively) plasma environment at Jupiter by the low-energy charged particle (LECP) instrument on Voyager 2 have revealed several new and unusual aspects of the Jovian magnetosphere. The magnetosphere is populated from its outer edge into a distance of at least approximately 30 Jupiter radii (R(J)) by a hot (3 x 10(8) to 5 x 10(8) K) multicomponent plasma consisting primarily of hydrogen, oxygen, and sulfur ions. Outside approximately 30 R(J) the hot plasma exhibits ion densities from approximately 10(-1) to approximately 10(-6) per cubic centimeter and energy densities from approximately 10(-8) to 10(-13) erg per cubic centimeter, suggesting a high beta plasma throughout the region. The plasma is flowing in the corotation direction to the edge of the magnetosphere on the dayside, where it is confined by solar wind pressure, and to a distance of approximately 140 to 160 R(J) on the nightside at approximately 0300 local time. Beyond approximately 150 R(J) the hot plasma flow changes into a "magnetospheric wind" blowing away from Jupiter at an angle of approximately 20 degrees west of the sun-Jupiter line, characterized by a temperature of approximately 3 x 10(8) K (26 kiloelectron volts), velocities ranging from approximately 300 to > 1000 kilometers per second, and composition similar to that observed in the inner magnetosphere. The radial profiles of the ratios of oxygen to helium and sulfur to helium (</= 1 million electron volts per nucleon) monotonically increase toward periapsis, while the carbon to helium ratio stays relatively constant; a significant amount of sodium (Na/O approximately 0.05) has also been identified. The hydrogen to helium ratio ranges from approximately 20 just outside the magnetosphere to values up to approximately 300 inside; the modulation of this ratio suggests a discontinuity in the particle population at approximately 50 to 60 R(J). Large fluctuations in energetic particle intensities were observed on the inbound trajectory as the spacecraft approached Ganymede, some of which suggest the presence of a "wake." Five-and 10-hour periodicities were observed in the magnetosphere. Calculations of plasma flow velocities with the use of Compton-Getting formalism imply that plasma is mostly corotating to large radial distances from the planet. Thus the Jovian magnetosphere is confined by a plasma boundary (as was implied by the model of Brice and Ioannidis) rather than a conventional magnetopause. Inside the plasma boundary there exists a discontinuity at approximately 50 to 60 R(J) we have named the region inside this discontinuity the "inner plasmasphere."

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