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Latest Paper:
J R Spencer,
S A Stern,
A F Cheng,
H A Weaver,
D C Reuter,
K Retherford,
A Lunsford,
J M Moore,
O Abramov,
R M C Lopes,
J E Perry,
L Kamp,
M Showalter,
K L Jessup,
F Marchis,
P M Schenk,
C Dumas
Jupiter's moon Io is known to host active volcanoes. In February and March 2007, the New Horizons spacecraft obtained a global snapshot of Io's volcanism. A 350-kilometer-high volcanic plume was seen to emanate from the Tvashtar volcano (62 degrees N, 122 degrees W), and its motion was observed. The plume's morphology and dynamics support nonballistic models of large Io plumes and also suggest that most visible plume particles condensed within the plume rather than being ejected from the source. In images taken in Jupiter eclipse, nonthermal visible-wavelength emission was seen from individual volcanoes near Io's sub-Jupiter and anti-Jupiter points. Near-infrared emission from the brightest volcanoes indicates minimum magma temperatures in the 1150- to 1335-kelvin range, consistent with basaltic composition.
K D Retherford,
J R Spencer,
S A Stern,
J Saur,
D F Strobel,
A J Steffl,
G R Gladstone,
H A Weaver,
A F Cheng,
J Wm Parker,
D C Slater,
M H Versteeg,
M W Davis,
F Bagenal,
H B Throop,
R M C Lopes,
D C Reuter,
A Lunsford,
S J Conard,
L A Young,
J M Moore
The New Horizons (NH) spacecraft observed Io's aurora in eclipse on four occasions during spring 2007. NH Alice ultraviolet spectroscopy and concurrent Hubble Space Telescope ultraviolet imaging in eclipse investigate the relative contribution of volcanoes to Io's atmosphere and its interaction with Jupiter's magnetosphere. Auroral brightness and morphology variations after eclipse ingress and egress reveal changes in the relative contribution of sublimation and volcanic sources to the atmosphere. Brightnesses viewed at different geometries are best explained by a dramatic difference between the dayside and nightside atmospheric density. Far-ultraviolet aurora morphology reveals the influence of plumes on Io's electrodynamic interaction with Jupiter's magnetosphere. Comparisons to detailed simulations of Io's aurora indicate that volcanoes supply 1 to 3% of the dayside atmosphere.
G Randall Gladstone,
S Alan Stern,
David C Slater,
Maarten Versteeg,
Michael W Davis,
Kurt D Retherford,
Leslie A Young,
Andrew J Steffl,
Henry Throop,
Joel Wm Parker,
Harold A Weaver,
Andrew F Cheng,
Glenn S Orton,
John T Clarke,
Jonathan D Nichols
Observations of Jupiter's nightside airglow (nightglow) and aurora obtained during the flyby of the New Horizons spacecraft show an unexpected lack of ultraviolet nightglow emissions, in contrast to the case during the Voyager flybys in 1979. The flux and average energy of precipitating electrons generally decrease with increasing local time across the nightside, consistent with a possible source region along the dusk flank of Jupiter's magnetosphere. Visible emissions associated with the interaction of Jupiter and its satellite Io extend to a surprisingly high altitude, indicating localized low-energy electron precipitation. These results indicate that the interaction between Jupiter's upper atmosphere and near-space environment is variable and poorly understood; extensive observations of the day side are no guide to what goes on at night.
F L Roesler,
H W Moos,
R J Oliversen,
R C Woodward Jr,
K D Retherford,
F Scherb,
M A McGrath,
W H Smyth,
P D Feldman,
D F Strobel
Physics Department, University of Wisconsin, 1150 University Avenue, Madison, WI 53706, USA.
Well-resolved far-ultraviolet spectroscopic images of O I, S I, and previously undetected H ILyman-alpha emission from Io were obtained with the Hubble space telescope imaging spectrograph (STIS). Detected O I and S I lines (1250 to 1500 angstroms) have bright equatorial spots (up to 2.5 kilorayleighs) that shift position with jovian magnetic field orientation; limb glow that is brighter on the hemisphere facing the jovian magnetic equator; and faint diffuse emission extending to approximately 20 Io radii. All O I and S I features brightened by approximately 50 percent in the last two images, concurrently with a ground-based observation of increased iogenic [O I] 6300-angstrom emission. The H ILyman-alpha emission, consisting of a small, approximately 2-kilorayleigh patch near each pole, has a different morphology and time variation.
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