Abstract

AbstractThe magnetic field observations from the Galileo, Ulysses, Voyager 1 and 2, and Pioneer 10 and 11 spacecraft are analyzed to understand the structures and thickness of the Jovian magnetospheric current sheet. Using a new technique that can determine the motion of the spacecraft relative to the current sheet, we have built the first global map of the thickness of the Jovian magnetospheric current sheet. We show that the current sheet thickness in Jupiter's magnetosphere is not equal everywhere but changes systematically with both radial distance and local time. The extremely thin dawnside current sheet appears to be linked to the stresses imposed by the solar wind on the open magnetic flux housed in the lobes of the magnetosphere in that sector. We also show evidence of a mostly closed magnetosphere in the dusk sector. We show that the current sheet thickness asymmetries likely arise from a field and plasma convection system set up by the reconnection of the interplanetary magnetic field with that of Jupiter.

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