Cassini between Venus and Earth: Detection of interstellar dust
Abstract
We report the successful in situ measurement of interstellar dust particles inside the orbit of the Earth with the Cosmic Dust Analyzer (CDA) on the Cassini spacecraft. The impact ionization subsystem of the CDA is similar to the instruments on Ulysses and Galileo. As the heliocentric velocity and the direction of the interstellar dust flux are well known from Ulysses measurements, a combined analysis of the impact charge signals together with geometric and kinematic spacecraft data allowed us to separate interplanetary impacts from interstellar ones. The mean interstellar flux between 0.7 and 1.2 AU derived from our analysis is 2.5 ± 0.5 · 10-5 m-2s-1, in a mass range of 5 · 10-17 kg to 10-15 kg which is in good agreement with the interstellar dust flux measured by Ulysses at 3 AU during the same time period [, 2003]. The simultaneous detection of interstellar grains by Ulysses at 3 AU and approximately 1 AU by Cassini proves that big interstellar grains (radius greater than 0.4 μm), can penetrate deeply into the inner solar system.
- Publication:
-
Journal of Geophysical Research (Space Physics)
- Pub Date:
- October 2003
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2003JGRA..108.8032A
- Keywords:
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- Planetology: Solar System Objects: Dust;
- Planetology: Comets and Small Bodies: Dust;
- Planetology: Comets and Small Bodies: Remote sensing;
- Planetology: Comets and Small Bodies: Satellites;
- interstellar dust;
- Cassini Dust Analyser (CDA);
- interaction of interstellar dust with heliosphere;
- penetration of interstellar dust into solar system;
- in situ detection of dust