Aurora to Magnetodisk Mapping: Connecting UV Emissions to Events in Jupiter's Magnetosphere
Abstract
The Juno Mission carries with it an ultraviolet spectrograph, Juno UVS, to map Jupiter's auroral emissions from an unprecedented vantage point above Jupiter's poles. With views of the aurora at all local times, Juno UVS allows for the first comprehensive compilation of the local time variations of the auroral emissions. Using the Vogt et al. (2011, JGR 116, A03220; 2015, JGR 120, 2584-2599) magnetic flux mapping approach we invert the observed auroral emission maps into maps of those emissions in magnetodisk coordinates. In this way, we are able to reconstruct the approximate (depending on the accuracy of the Vogt mapping and JRM09 magnetic field model) structure and evolution of the source regions causing the auroral emissions leading to further insight on the dynamics of the middle to outer magnetosphere. We present mission average disk projected maps, those from assorted perijoves (close flyby of Jupiter by Juno on its highly elliptical orbit of ~53 days), and discuss their temporal evolution over timescales of minutes and hours (a single perijove) to months and years (perijove to perijove).
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2020
- Bibcode:
- 2020AGUFMSM0560005G
- Keywords:
-
- 2704 Auroral phenomena;
- MAGNETOSPHERIC PHYSICS;
- 2756 Planetary magnetospheres;
- MAGNETOSPHERIC PHYSICS;
- 5719 Interactions with particles and fields;
- PLANETARY SCIENCES: FLUID PLANETS;
- 6220 Jupiter;
- PLANETARY SCIENCES: SOLAR SYSTEM OBJECTS