4.8 Article

Dynamics of Saturn's magnetosphere from MIMI during Cassini's orbital insertion

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 307, Issue 5713, Pages 1270-1273

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.1105978

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The Magnetospheric Imaging Instrument (MIMI) onboard the Cassini spacecraft observed the saturnian magnetosphere from January 2004 until Saturn orbit insertion (Sol) on 1 July 2004. The MIMI sensors observed frequent energetic particle activity in interplanetary space for several months before Sol. When the imaging sensor was switched to its energetic neutral atom (ENA) operating mode on 20 February 2004, at similar to10(3) times Saturn's radius R-s (0.43 astronomical units), a weak but persistent signal was observed from the magnetosphere. About 10 days before Sol, the magnetosphere exhibited a day-night asymmetry that varied with an similar to 11-hour periodicity. Once Cassini entered the magnetosphere, in situ measurements showed high concentrations of H+, H-2(+), O+, OH+, and H2O+ and low concentrations of N+. The radial dependence of ion intensity profiles implies neutral gas densities sufficient to produce high loss rates of trapped ions from the middle and inner magnetosphere. ENA imaging has revealed a radiation belt that resides inward of the D ring and is probably the result of double charge exchange between the main radiation belt and the upper layers of Saturn's exosphere.

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