During its late orbital mission at Jupiter the Galileo spacecraft made two
passages through the giant planet's gossamer ring system. The impact-ionization
dust detector on board successfully recorded dust impacts during both ring
passages and provided the first in-situ measurements from a dusty planetary
ring. In all, a few thousand dust impacts were counted with the instrument
accumulators during both ring passages, but only a total of 110 complete data
sets of dust impacts were transmitted to Earth. Detected particle sizes range
from about 0.2 to 5 micron, extending the known size distribution by an order
of magnitude towards smaller particles than previously derived from optical
imaging (Showalter et al. 2008). The grain size distribution increases towards
smaller particles and shows an excess of these tiny motes in the Amalthea
gossamer ring compared to the Thebe ring. The size distribution for the
Amalthea ring derived from our in-situ measurements for the small grains agrees
very well with the one obtained from images for large grains. Our analysis
shows that particles contributing most to the optical cross-section are about 5
micron in radius, in agreement with imaging results. The measurements indicate
a large drop in particle flux immediately interior to Thebe's orbit and some
detected particles seem to be on highly-tilted orbits with inclinations up to
20 deg.Comment: 13 figures, 4 tables, submitted to Icaru