Journal
ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 424, Issue 1, Pages 331-337Publisher
EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20041149
Keywords
planets and satellites : general; planets and satellites : individual : Jupiter; X-rays : general
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We present the first X-ray observation of Jupiter by XMM-Newton. Images taken with the EPIC cameras show prominent emission, essentially all confined to the 0.2-2.0 keV band, from the planet's auroral spots; their spectra can be modelled with a combination of unresolved emission lines of highly ionised oxygen (OVII and OVIII), and a pseudo-continuum which may also be due to the superposition of many weak lines. A 2.8sigma enhancement in the RGS spectrum at 21-22 Angstrom (similar to0.57 keV) is consistent with an OVII identification. Our spectral analysis supports the hypothesis that Jupiter's auroral emissions originate from the capture and acceleration of solar wind ions in the planet's magnetosphere, followed by X-ray production by charge exchange. The X-ray flux of the North spot is modulated at Jupiter's rotation period. We do not detect evidence for the similar to45 min X-ray oscillations observed by Chandra more than two years earlier. Emission from the equatorial regions of the planet's disk is also observed. Its spectrum is consistent with that of scattered solar X-rays.
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