Juno spacecraft gravity measurements provide evidence for normal modes of Jupiter

Author:

Durante DanieleORCID,Guillot TristanORCID,Iess LucianoORCID,Stevenson David J.,Mankovich Christopher R.ORCID,Markham Steve,Galanti EliORCID,Kaspi YohaiORCID,Zannoni MarcoORCID,Gomez Casajus LuisORCID,Lari Giacomo,Parisi MarziaORCID,Buccino Dustin R.,Park Ryan S.ORCID,Bolton Scott J.

Abstract

AbstractThe Juno spacecraft has been collecting data to shed light on the planet’s origin and characterize its interior structure. The onboard gravity science experiment based on X-band and Ka-band dual-frequency Doppler tracking precisely measured Jupiter’s zonal gravitational field. Here, we analyze 22 Juno’s gravity passes to investigate the gravity field. Our analysis provides evidence of new gravity field features, which perturb its otherwise axially symmetric structure with a time-variable component. We show that normal modes of the planet could explain the anomalous signatures present in the Doppler data better than other alternative explanations, such as localized density anomalies and non-axisymmetric components of the static gravity field. We explain Juno data by p-modes having an amplitude spectrum with a peak radial velocity of 10–50 cm/s at 900–1200 μHz (compatible with ground-based observations) and provide upper bounds on lower frequency f-modes (radial velocity smaller than 1 cm/s). The new Juno results could open the possibility of exploring the interior structure of the gas giants through measurements of the time-variable gravity or with onboard instrumentation devoted to the observation of normal modes, which could drive spacecraft operations of future missions.

Funder

Agenzia Spaziale Italiana

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary

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