Jovian auroral spectroscopy with FUSE: analysis of self-absorption and implications for electron precipitation
Abstract
High-resolution ( ∼0.22 Å) spectra of the north jovian aurora were obtained in the 905-1180 Å window with the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE) on October 28, 2000. The FUSE instrument resolves the rotational structure of the H 2 spectra and the spectral range allows the study of self-absorption. Below 1100 Å, transitions connecting to the v⩽2 levels of the H 2 ground state are partially or totally absorbed by the overlying H 2 molecules. The FUSE spectra provide information on the overlying H 2 column and on the vibrational distribution of H 2. Transitions from high-energy H 2 Rydberg states and treatment of self-absorption are considered in our synthetic spectral generator. We show comparisons between synthetic and observed spectra in the 920-970, 1030-1080, and 1090-1180 Å spectral windows. In a first approach ( single-layer model ), the synthetic spectra are generated in a thin emitting layer and the emerging photons are absorbed by a layer located above the source. It is found that the parameters of the single-layer model best fitting the three spectral windows are 850, 800, and 800 K respectively for the H 2 gas temperature and 1.3×10, 1.5×10, and 1.3×10 cm for the H 2 self-absorbing vertical column respectively. Comparison between the H 2 column and a 1-D atmospheric model indicates that the short-wavelength FUV auroral emission originates from just above the homopause. This is confirmed by the high H 2 rovibrational temperatures, close to those deduced from spectral analyses of H +3 auroral emission. In a second approach, the synthetic spectral generator is coupled with a vertically distributed energy degradation model, where the only input is the energy distribution of incoming electrons ( multi-layer model ). The model that best fits globally the three FUSE spectra is a sum of Maxwellian functions, with characteristic energies ranging from 1 to 100 keV, giving rise to an emission peak located at 5 μbar, that is ∼100 km below the methane homopause. This multi-layer model is also applied to a re-analysis of the Hopkins Ultraviolet Telescope (HUT) auroral spectrum and accounts for the H 2 self-absorption as well as the methane absorption. It is found that no additional discrete soft electron precipitation is necessary to fit either the FUSE or the HUT observations.
- Publication:
-
Icarus
- Pub Date:
- October 2004
- DOI:
- 10.1016/j.icarus.2004.06.005
- Bibcode:
- 2004Icar..171..336G
- Keywords:
-
- Aurora;
- Jupiter;
- Spectroscopy;
- Ultraviolet observations