4.5 Article

Evidence of m=1 density mode (plasma cam) in Saturn's rotating magnetosphere

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-SPACE PHYSICS
Volume 121, Issue 3, Pages 2335-2348

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2015JA022131

Keywords

Saturn; Cassini; plasma cam; Fourier analysis

Funding

  1. Cassini CAPS project via JPL [1405851]
  2. Southwest Research Institute

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Cassini field and plasma data measured in the rotating Saturn Longitude System 3 (SLS3) coordinate system show positive evidence of structure whose dominant azimuthal wave number is m = 1: a long-lived, nonaxisymmetric, cam-shaped, global plasma distribution in Saturn's magnetosphere. Previous studies have identified evidence of this plasma cam in wave-derived electron density data and in Cassini Plasma Spectrometer (CAPS) W+ ion counts data. In this paper we report the first comprehensive analysis of CAPS ion moments data to identify the m = 1 density cam. We employ a multiyear, multispecies database of 685,678 CAPS density values, binned into a 1 R-S by 4.8 degrees discretized grid, spanning 4-19R(S). Fourier (harmonic) analysis shows that at most radial distances the dominant azimuthal mode is m = 1, for both W+ and H+ ion distributions. The majority (63%) of m = 1 ion peaks are clustered in an SLS3 quadrant centered at 330 degrees. The plasma cam's existence has important implications for the global interchange-driven convection cycle and is a clue to solving the mystery of the rotational periodicities in Saturn's magnetosphere.

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