Interaction of the solar wind with the planet Mars: Phobos 2 magnetic field observations
Abstract
The magnetometers on board the Phobos 2 spacecraft provided the opportunity to study the magnetic environment around Mars, including regions which have never been explored before, such as at low altitudes (down to 850 km above the surface of Mars) and in the tail. The data revealed a bow shock, characterized by a distinct jump in the magnetic field strength and a boundary denoted "planetopause", where the level of turbulence of the magnetic field changes. Inside the planetopause the field remains quiet. Some of the main characteristics of the bow shock and the magnetosheath can be reproduced by computer simulations within the framework of a gas-dynamic model using the observed planetopause as an obstacle for the incoming solar wind. In many spacecraft orbits around Mars, reversals of the Bx-component were found which are typical for tail crossings. A first analysis of the tail data from the circular orbits at a distance of 2.8 Mars radii showed several cases where the reversal of the tail lobes was controlled by the IMF. This supports the idea of an induced character of the solar wind interaction with Mars outside a distance of about 2.8 Mars radii. However, there are certain features in the magnetic field data which could be interpreted as traces of a weak Martian intrinsic field.
- Publication:
-
Planetary and Space Science
- Pub Date:
- February 1991
- DOI:
- 10.1016/0032-0633(91)90129-X
- Bibcode:
- 1991P&SS...39...75R
- Keywords:
-
- Computerized Simulation;
- Mars Surface;
- Phobos;
- Planetary Magnetic Fields;
- Solar Wind;
- Mars Probes;
- Planetary Magnetospheres;
- Spaceborne Astronomy;
- MARS;
- SPACECRAFT OBSERVATIONS;
- PHOBOS 2 MISSION;
- SOLAR WIND;
- INTERACTION;
- MAGNETIC FIELD;
- ALTITUDE;
- MAGNETOTAIL;
- BOW SHOCK;
- TURBULENCE;
- DISTANCE;
- MAGNETOSHEATH;
- MAGMA INSTRUMENT;
- FGMM INSTRUMENT;
- BOUNDARIES;
- MAGNITUDE;
- MAGNETOPAUSE;
- Lunar and Planetary Exploration; Mars