Investigating Boundary Layer Properties at Jupiter's Dawn Magnetopause

Author:

Montgomery Jake12ORCID,Ebert R. W.12ORCID,Allegrini F.12ORCID,Fuselier S. A.12ORCID,Bagenal F.3ORCID,Bolton S. J.2ORCID,Szalay J.4ORCID,Wilson R. J.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physics and Astronomy University of Texas at San Antonio San Antonio TX USA

2. Southwest Research Institute San Antonio TX USA

3. Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics University of Colorado Boulder Boulder CO USA

4. Department of Astrophysical Sciences Princeton University Princeton NJ USA

Abstract

AbstractWe survey crossings of Jupiter's dawn magnetopause during the Juno prime mission to identify and characterize Jupiter's magnetopause boundary layer. Using plasma and magnetic field observations from Jovian Auroral Distributions Experiment and Juno Magnetic Field investigation, we identify 53 boundary layer events from the 62 magnetopause crossings studied here. We find that the boundary layer generally exhibits mixed properties of magnetosheath and magnetosphere electron distributions, including lower characteristic electron energies and denser ion populations than in the magnetosphere, but higher characteristic electron energies and less dense ion populations than in the magnetosheath. Boundary layer proton speeds are on average slower than both the magnetosheath and magnetosphere. Other proton parameters in the boundary layer have intermediate values between the magnetosheath and magnetosphere. Through ion composition analysis in regions adjacent to the magnetopause, we find evidence of solar wind and magnetospheric plasma in the boundary layer that suggests plasma is transported across the magnetopause in both directions. This mass and energy transport may be the result of solar wind interactions such as magnetic reconnection and Kelvin‐Helmholtz instabilities. However, many boundary layer events do not exhibit local signatures of these solar wind interactions and plasma may be transported by a non‐local process or diffusively transported.

Funder

Aurora Foundation

Experiment

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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