• Title of article

    Response of the Jovian thermosphere to a transient ‘pulse’ in solar wind pressure

  • Author/Authors

    Yates، نويسنده , , J.N. and Achilleos، نويسنده , , N. and Guio، نويسنده , , P.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
  • Pages
    18
  • From page
    27
  • To page
    44
  • Abstract
    The importance of the Jovian thermosphere with regard to magnetosphere–ionosphere coupling is often neglected in magnetospheric physics. We present the first study to investigate the response of the Jovian thermosphere to transient variations in solar wind dynamic pressure, using an azimuthally symmetric global circulation model coupled to a simple magnetosphere and fixed auroral conductivity model. In our simulations, the Jovian magnetosphere encounters a solar wind shock or rarefaction region and is subsequently compressed or expanded. We present the ensuing response of the coupling currents, thermospheric flows, heating and cooling terms, and the aurora to these transient events. Transient compressions cause the reversal, with respect to steady state, of magnetosphere–ionosphere coupling currents and momentum transfer between the thermosphere and magnetosphere. They also cause at least a factor of two increase in the Joule heating rate. Ion drag significantly changes the kinetic energy of the thermospheric neutrals depending on whether the magnetosphere is compressed or expanded. Local temperature variations appear between ~ − 45 and 175 K for the compression scenario and ~ − 20 and 50 K for the expansion case. Extended regions of equatorward flow develop in the wake of compression events – we discuss the implications of this behaviour for global energy transport. Both compressions and expansions lead to a ~ 2000 TW increase in the total power dissipated or deposited in the thermosphere. In terms of auroral processes, transient compressions increase main oval UV emission by a factor of ~ 4.5 whilst transient expansions increase this main emission by a more modest 37%. Both types of transient event cause shifts in the position of the main oval, of up to 1° latitude.
  • Keywords
    Magnetosphere , Time-dependent , Angular momentum , Thermosphere , Transient , Jupiter
  • Journal title
    PLANETARY AND SPACE SCIENCE
  • Serial Year
    2014
  • Journal title
    PLANETARY AND SPACE SCIENCE
  • Record number

    2316079