Reconnection Acceleration in Saturn’s Dayside Magnetodisk: A Multicase Study with Cassini

Guo, R. L. and Yao, Z. H. and Sergis, N. and Wei, Y. and Mitchell, D. and Roussos, E. and Palmaerts, B. and Dunn, W. R. and Radioti, A. and Ray, L. C. and Coates, A. J. and Grodent, D. and Arridge, C. S. and Kollmann, P. and Krupp, N. and Waite, J. H. and Dougherty, M. K. and Burch, J. L. and Wan, W. X. (2018) Reconnection Acceleration in Saturn’s Dayside Magnetodisk: A Multicase Study with Cassini. The Astrophysical Journal, 868 (2). L23. ISSN 2041-8213

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Abstract

Recently, rotationally driven magnetic reconnection was first discovered in Saturn's dayside magnetosphere. This newly confirmed process could potentially drive bursty phenomena at Saturn, i.e., pulsating energetic particles and auroral emissions. Using Cassini's measurements of magnetic fields and charged particles, we investigate particle acceleration features during three magnetic reconnection events observed in Saturn's dayside magnetodisk. The results suggest that the rotationally driven reconnection process plays a key role in producing energetic electrons (up to 100 keV) and ions (several hundreds of kiloelectron volts). In particular, we find that energetic oxygen ions are locally accelerated at all three reconnection sites. Isolated, multiple reconnection sites were recorded in succession during an interval lasting for much less than one Saturn rotation period. Moreover, a secondary magnetic island is reported for the first time at the dayside, collectively suggesting that the reconnection process is not steady and could be "drizzle-like." This study demonstrates the fundamental importance of internally driven magnetic reconnection in accelerating particles in Saturn's dayside magnetosphere, and likewise in the rapidly rotating Jovian magnetosphere and beyond.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Asian STM > Physics and Astronomy
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 08 Jun 2023 07:02
Last Modified: 04 Nov 2023 06:14
URI: http://journal.send2sub.com/id/eprint/1640

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