Magnetosphere, exosphere, and surface of mercury
Abstract
The discovery of an atomic sodium exosphere at Mercury raises the question of whether Mercury, like Io at Jupiter, can maintain a heavy ion magnetosphere. We suggest that it does, and that heavy ions (mainly Na +) from the exosphere are typically accelerated to keV energies and make important or dominant contributions to the mass (∼300 g sec -1) and energy (∼3 × 10 9W) budgets of the magnetosphere. The sodium supply to the exosphere is largely from within Mercury itself, with external sources like meteroid infall and the solar wind being relatively unimportant. Therefore Mercury is in the process of losing its semivolatiles. Photosputtering dominates charged particle sputtering and can maintain an adequate rate of Na ejection from the surface.
- Publication:
-
Icarus
- Pub Date:
- September 1987
- DOI:
- 10.1016/0019-1035(87)90038-8
- Bibcode:
- 1987Icar...71..430C
- Keywords:
-
- Exosphere;
- Heavy Ions;
- Mercury Surface;
- Metal Ions;
- Planetary Magnetic Fields;
- Planetary Magnetospheres;
- Sodium Vapor;
- Dipole Moments;
- Energetic Particles;
- Energy Budgets;
- Mariner 10 Space Probe;
- Planetary Rings;
- Solar Wind;
- MERCURY (PLANET);
- MAGNETOSPHERE;
- EXOSPHERE;
- SURFACE;
- SODIUM;
- HEAVY IONS;
- MASS;
- ENERGY;
- SOURCE;
- METEORIODS;
- SOLAR WIND;
- SPUTTERING;
- VOLATILES;
- CHARGED PARTICLES;
- EJECTION;
- CALCULATIONS;
- DIAGRAMS;
- OXYGEN;
- Lunar and Planetary Exploration; Mercury, Earth Science