12 research outputs found

    Temporal and Spectral Studies by XMM-Newton of Jupiter's X-ray Auroras During a Compression Event

    Full text link
    We report the temporal and spectral results of the first XMM-Newton observation of Jupiter's X-ray auroras during a clear magnetospheric compression event on June 2017 as confirmed by data from the Jovian Auroral Distributions Experiment (JADE) instrument onboard Juno. The northern and southern auroras were visible twice and thrice respectively as they rotated in and out of view during the ∼23-hr (almost 2.5 Jupiter rotations) long XMM-Newton Jovian-observing campaign. Previous auroral observations by Chandra and XMM-Newton have shown that the X-ray auroras sometimes pulse with a regular period. We applied wavelet and fast Fourier transforms (FFTs) on the auroral light curves to show that, following the compression event, the X-ray auroras exhibited a recurring 23- to 27-min periodicity that lasted over 12.5 hr (longer than a Jupiter rotation). This periodicity was observed from both the northern and southern auroras, suggesting that the emission from both poles was caused by a shared driver. The soft X-ray component of the auroras is due to charge exchange processes between precipitating ions and neutrals in Jupiter's atmosphere. We utilized the Atomic Charge Exchange (ACX) spectral package to produce solar wind and iogenic plasma models to fit the auroral spectra in order to identify the origins of these ions. For this observation, the iogenic model gave the best fit, which suggests that the precipitating ions are from iogenic plasma in Jupiter's magnetosphere. ©2020. The Authors
    corecore