The Solar Wind Ion Composition Spectrometer
Abstract
The Solar Wind Ion Composition Spectrometer (SWICS) on Ulysses is designed to determine uniquely the elemental and ionic-charge composition, and the temperatures and mean speeds of all major solar-wind ions, from H through Fe, at solar wind speeds ranging from 175 km/s (protons) to 1280 km/s (Fe(8+)). The instrument, which covers an energy per charge range from 0.16 to 59.6 keV/e in about 13 min, combines an electrostatic analyzer with post-acceleration, followed by a time-of-flight and energy measurement. The measurements made by SWICS will have an impact on many areas of solar and heliospheric physics, in particular providing essential and unique information on: (1) conditions and processes in the region of the corona where the solar wind is accelerated; (2) the location of the source regions of the solar wind in the corona; (3) coronal heating processes; (4) the extent and causes of variations in the composition of the solar atmosphere; (5) plasma processes in the solar wind; (6) the acceleration of energetic particles in the solar wind; (7) the thermalization and acceleration of interstellar ions in the solar wind, and their composition; and (8) the composition, charge states, and behavior of the plasma in various regions of the Jovian magnetosphere.
- Publication:
-
Astronomy and Astrophysics Supplement Series
- Pub Date:
- January 1992
- Bibcode:
- 1992A&AS...92..267G
- Keywords:
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- Interplanetary Medium;
- Mass Spectrometers;
- Plasma Composition;
- Satellite-Borne Instruments;
- Solar Wind Velocity;
- Ulysses Mission;
- Hydrogen Ions;
- Ion Charge;
- Ion Temperature;
- Metal Ions;
- Solar Protons;
- Spacecraft Instrumentation