Rotationally driven magnetic reconnection in Saturn's dayside

Guo, R. L. and Yao, Z. H. and Wei, Y. and Ray, Licia C and Rae, I.J. and Arridge, Christopher Stephen and Coates, A.J. and Delamere, P.A. and Sergis, N. and Kollman, P. and Grodent, D. and Dunn, W.R. and Waite, J.H. and Burch, J.L. and Pu, Z.Y. and Palmaerts, B. and Dougherty, M.K. (2018) Rotationally driven magnetic reconnection in Saturn's dayside. Nature Astronomy, 2. pp. 640-645. ISSN 2397-3366

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Abstract

Magnetic reconnection is a key process that explosively accelerates charged particles, generating phenomena such as nebular flares, solar flares and stunning aurorae. In planetary magnetospheres, magnetic reconnection has often been identified on the dayside magnetopause and in the nightside magnetodisc, where thin-current-sheet conditions are conducive to reconnection. The dayside magnetodisc is usually considered thicker than the nightside due to the compression of solar wind, and is therefore not an ideal environment for reconnection. In contrast, a recent statistical study of magnetic flux circulation strongly suggests that magnetic reconnection must occur throughout Saturn’s dayside magnetosphere. Additionally, the source of energetic plasma can be present in the noon sector of giant planetary magnetospheres. However, so far, dayside magnetic reconnection has only been identified at the magnetopause. Here, we report direct evidence of near-noon reconnection within Saturn’s magnetodisc using measurements from the Cassini spacecraft. The measured energetic electrons and ions (ranging from tens to hundreds of keV) and the estimated energy flux of ~2.6 mW m–2 within the reconnection region are sufficient to power aurorae. We suggest that dayside magnetodisc reconnection can explain bursty phenomena in the dayside magnetospheres of giant planets, which can potentially advance our understanding of quasi-periodic injections of relativistic electrons6 and auroral pulsations.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Nature Astronomy
Additional Information:
© 2018 Macmillan Publishers Limited, part of Springer Nature. All rights reserved.
ID Code:
125018
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
08 May 2018 08:28
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
15 Sep 2023 04:24