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Radio Occultation Measurements of Europa's Ionosphere From Juno's Close Flyby

Marzia Parisi, Andrea Caruso, Dustin Buccino, Edoardo Gramigna, Paul Withers, L. Gomez‐Casajus, Drew Coffin, Ryan S. Park, Paul G. Steffes, Paolo Tortora, Marco Zannoni, S. Levin, S. J. Bolton

2023Geophysical Research Letters13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract On 29 September 2022 the Juno spacecraft flew within 354 km of Europa's surface while several instruments probed the moon's surroundings. During the close flyby, radio occultations were performed by collecting single‐frequency Doppler measurements. These investigations are essential to the study of Europa's ionosphere and represent the first repeat sampling of any set of conditions since the Galileo era. Ingress measurements resulted in a marginal detection with a peak ionospheric density of 4,000 ± 3,700 cm −3 (3 σ ) at 22 km altitude. A more significant detection emerged on egress, with a peak density of 6,000 ± 3,000 cm −3 (3 σ ) at 320 km altitude. Comparison with Galileo measurements reveals a consistent picture of Europa's ionosphere, and confirms its dependence on illumination conditions and position within Jupiter's magnetosphere. However, the overall lower densities measured by Juno suggest a dependence on time of observation, with implications for the structure of the neutral atmosphere.

Topics & Concepts

IonosphereRadio occultationAltitude (triangle)Atmosphere (unit)GeologyJupiter (rocket family)Galilean moonsMagnetosphereGeodesyAstronomyAtmospheric sciencesSpacecraftPhysicsGeophysicsMeteorologySatelliteNatural satellitePlasmaQuantum mechanicsGeometryMathematicsAstro and Planetary SciencePlanetary Science and ExplorationIonosphere and magnetosphere dynamics