4.3 Article

The morphology of Saturn's ultraviolet aurora

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Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2012JA017670

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  1. NASA Office of Space Science [NAS5-97271]
  2. Johns Hopkins University

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Spectrographic images in the far ultraviolet, obtained from observations made from 2007 to 2009, are used to quantify and compare the morphology of Saturn's northern and southern aurora in local time. Made by the UVIS imager on the Cassini spacecraft, these observations differ from previous UV observations of Saturn's aurora by offering complete local time coverage of the aurora from small zenith angles. A statistical picture emerges after combining over 10(5) spectrographic images of the north and south aurora. From its composite, the northern aurora exhibits an intensity peak of similar to 40 kR near 05 h local time, while the southern aurora peaks at similar to 60 kR near the same local time. Aurora intensities in the post-noon sectors are essentially constant at similar to 10 kR. The half-power points of latitudinal profiles reveal widths of similar to 4 degrees near dawn and similar to 8 degrees near dusk in both north and south. The aurora has an approximately circular shape (not oval!), although harmonic fits suggest the northern aurora is more nearly circular than the southern. The center of the northern aurora has an offset of similar to 1-2 degrees from the pole, while the southern center is offset by similar to 2-3 degrees, with both offsets in the midnight-to-dawn quadrant. When mapped to the polar regions, precipitation of field-aligned energetic electrons (>20 keV) generally lies equatorward of the main auroral intensity at all local times.

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