4.5 Article

Azimuthal variation of ion density and electron temperature in the Io plasma torus

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-SPACE PHYSICS
Volume 105, Issue A7, Pages 16035-16052

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/1998JA000259

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We analyzed about 47 hours of Voyager 1 ultraviolet spectrometer observations of the Io plasma torus in order to determine the distributions of ion and electron density and electron temperature as five-dimensional functions of (1) radius (L), (2) System III longitude (lambda(III)), (3) System IV longitude (lambda(IV)), (4) Jovian local solar time (phi(circle dot)), and (5) azimuth relative to Io (phi(Io)). We present averaged profiles of electron density (n(e)) and temperature (T-e) as one-dimensional functions of each of these five variables in turn. Each of these profiles is am average of the full five-dimensional distribution over the other four variables. Our T-e(L) estimate is substantially the same as that determined from in situ observations by the Voyager 1 plasma science investigation. As for the azimuthal profiles, we find that the n(e)(lambda(III)) profile has a peak near lambda(III)=180 degrees, as expected from ground-based observations, while the T-e(lambda(III)) profile peaks around lambda(III)=300 degrees; The Jovian surface magnetic field reaches its lowest magnitude on the Io footprints near the T-e(lambda(III)) maximum, suggesting that part of the torus electron heating might be associated with Birkeland currents or some other magnetosphere-ionosphere coupling. In the Io frame, we find an apparent n(e)(phi(Io)) maximum about 90 degrees downstream from Io while the highest T-e(phi(Io)) occurs near Io, suggesting that electrons are locally heated by the Io atmosphere-torus MHD interaction. These two T-e profiles suggest that field-aligned currents might comprise the long-sought additional (i.e., besides fresh ion pickup) electron-heating power source for torus emissions needed to resolve the torus energy crisis. In local solar time, we find that the T-e(phi(circle dot)) and n(e)(phi(circle dot)) profiles peak between dusk and local midnight, with the former maximum nearer dusk and the latter nearer midnight. This combination suggests that the variation is due to an offset of the torus toward local midmorning, and perhaps that the cooling time is short. We also describe a general method for constraining solutions to be nonnegative when fitting data using the singular value decomposition least squares technique.

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