TY - JOUR
T1 - Effect of Meteoric Ions on Ionospheric Conductance at Jupiter
AU - Nakamura, Yuki
AU - Terada, Koichiro
AU - Tao, Chihiro
AU - Terada, Naoki
AU - Kasaba, Yasumasa
AU - Leblanc, François
AU - Kita, Hajime
AU - Nakamizo, Aoi
AU - Yoshikawa, Akimasa
AU - Ohtani, Shinichi
AU - Tsuchiya, Fuminori
AU - Kagitani, Masato
AU - Sakanoi, Takeshi
AU - Murakami, Go
AU - Yoshioka, Kazuo
AU - Kimura, Tomoki
AU - Yamazaki, Atsushi
AU - Yoshikawa, Ichiro
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by JSPS KAKENHI grant numbers JP18H05439 and JP20H00192. Work at NICT (Aoi Nakamizo), Kyushu University (Akimasa Yoshikawa), and JHU/APL (Shinichi Ohtani) was supported by JSPS KAKENHI Grant Number 20H01961. Work at the University of Tokyo (Kazuo Yoshioka) was supported by JSPS KAKENHI Grant Number 19H01948. Work at JHU/APL (Shinichi Ohtani) was support by National Science Foundation (NSF) grant 1502700. Y. Nakamura is supported by the International Joint Graduate Program in Earth and Environmental Sciences, Tohoku University (GP‐EES).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2022/3
Y1 - 2022/3
N2 - Ionospheric Pedersen and Hall conductances play significant roles in electromagnetic coupling between the planetary ionosphere and magnetosphere. Several observations and models have suggested the existence of meteoric ions with interplanetary origins in the lower part of Jupiter’s ionosphere; however, no models have considered the contributions of meteoric ions to ionospheric conductance. This study is designed to evaluate the contribution of meteoric ions to ionospheric conductance by developing an ionospheric model combining a meteoroid ablation model and a photochemical model. We find that the largest contribution to Pedersen and Hall conductivities occurs in the meteoric ion layer at altitudes of 350–600 km due to the large concentration of meteoric ions resulting from their long lifetimes of more than 100 Jovian days. Pedersen and Hall conductances are enhanced by factors of 3 and 10, respectively, in the middle- and low-latitude and auroral regions when meteoric ions are included. The distribution of Pedersen and Hall conductances becomes axisymmetric in the middle- and low-latitude regions. Enhanced axisymmetric ionospheric conductance should impact magnetospheric plasma convection. The contribution of meteoric ions to the ionospheric conductance is expected to be important only on Jupiter in our solar system because of Jupiter’s intense magnetic and gravitational fields.
AB - Ionospheric Pedersen and Hall conductances play significant roles in electromagnetic coupling between the planetary ionosphere and magnetosphere. Several observations and models have suggested the existence of meteoric ions with interplanetary origins in the lower part of Jupiter’s ionosphere; however, no models have considered the contributions of meteoric ions to ionospheric conductance. This study is designed to evaluate the contribution of meteoric ions to ionospheric conductance by developing an ionospheric model combining a meteoroid ablation model and a photochemical model. We find that the largest contribution to Pedersen and Hall conductivities occurs in the meteoric ion layer at altitudes of 350–600 km due to the large concentration of meteoric ions resulting from their long lifetimes of more than 100 Jovian days. Pedersen and Hall conductances are enhanced by factors of 3 and 10, respectively, in the middle- and low-latitude and auroral regions when meteoric ions are included. The distribution of Pedersen and Hall conductances becomes axisymmetric in the middle- and low-latitude regions. Enhanced axisymmetric ionospheric conductance should impact magnetospheric plasma convection. The contribution of meteoric ions to the ionospheric conductance is expected to be important only on Jupiter in our solar system because of Jupiter’s intense magnetic and gravitational fields.
KW - Jupiter
KW - ionospheric conductance
KW - meteoric ion
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U2 - 10.1029/2022JA030312
DO - 10.1029/2022JA030312
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85127307995
SN - 2169-9380
VL - 127
JO - Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics
JF - Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics
IS - 3
M1 - e2022JA030312
ER -