4.6 Article

X-ray emission from Saturn

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ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
卷 418, 期 1, 页码 337-345

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EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20035736

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planets and satellites : general; planets and satellites : individual : Saturn; X-rays : general

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We report the first unambiguous detection of X-ray emission originating from Saturn with a Chandra observation, duration 65.5 ks with ACIS-S3. Beyond the pure detection we analyze the spatial distribution of X-rays on the planetary surface, the light curve, and some spectral properties. The detection is based on 162 cts extracted from the ACIS-S3 chip within the optical disk of Saturn. We found no evidence for smaller or larger angular extent. The expected background level is 56 cts, i.e., the count rate is (1.6 +/- 0.2) x 10(-3) cts/s. The extracted photons are rather concentrated towards the equator of the apparent disk. while both polar caps have a relative photon deficit. The inclination angle of Saturn during the observation was similar to-27degrees, so that the northern hemisphere was not visible during the complete observation. In addition, it was occulted by the ring system. We found a small but significant photon excess at one edge of the ring system. The light curve shows a small dip twice at identical phases, but rotational modulation cannot be claimed at a significant level. Spectral modeling results in a number of statistically, but not necessarily physically, acceptable models. The X-ray flux level we calculate from the best-fit spectral models is similar to6.8 x 10(-15) erg cm(-2) s(-1) (in the energy interval 0.1-2 keV), which corresponds to an X-ray luminosity of similar to8.7 x 10(14) erg s(-1). A combination of scatter processes of solar X-rays require a relatively high albedo favoring internal processes, but a definitive explanation remains an open issue.

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