agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com
Open in
urlscan Pro
2606:4700:7::a29f:8157
Public Scan
Submitted URL: https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/share/IM7MFFYIGRJTIMJAR6ZD?target=10.1029/2021GL096492
Effective URL: https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1029/2021GL096492
Submission: On February 09 via api from US — Scanned from DE
Effective URL: https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1029/2021GL096492
Submission: On February 09 via api from US — Scanned from DE
Form analysis
1 forms found in the DOMPOST #
<form method="post" action="#" role="search">
<div class="fieldWithButton">
<input class="search-field" placeholder="Search this document...">
<button type="submit" class="btn--cta__light small submit">
<span class="d-none d-md-inline-block">SEARCH</span>
<span class="d-inline-block d-md-none icon material-icons">search</span>
</button>
</div>
</form>
Text Content
PUBLICATION LOADED error_outline JAVASCRIPT DISABLED You have to enable JavaScript in your browser's settings in order to use the eReader. Or try downloading the content offline DOWNLOAD menu close info list link CLOSE ARTICLE SATURN'S WEATHER‐DRIVEN AURORAE MODULATE OSCILLATIONS IN THE MAGNETIC FIELD AND RADIO EMISSIONS * navigate_before BACK info Details DETAILS ARTICLE SATURN'S WEATHER-DRIVEN AURORAE MODULATE OSCILLATIONS IN THE MAGNETIC FIELD AND RADIO EMISSIONS M. N. Chowdhury, T. S. Stallard, K. H. Baines, G. Provan, H. Melin, G. J. Hunt, L. Moore, J. O’Donoghue, E. M. Thomas, R. Wang, S. Miller, S. V. Badman format_quote CITE © 2021. The Authors. https://doi.org/10.1029/2021GL096492 Published inGeophysical Research Letters PublisherJohn Wiley & Sons, Ltd ISSN0094-8276 eISSN1944-8007 Received7 October 2021 Accepted20 December 2021 Volume49 Issue3 Pagesn/a - n/a ABSTRACT The Cassini spacecraft revealed that Saturn's magnetic field displayed oscillations at a period originally thought to match the planetary rotation rate but later found not to. One of many proposed theories predicts that a polar twin-cell neutral weather system drives this variation, producing observable differences in flows within Saturn's ionosphere. Here, using spectral observations of auroral emission lines taken by the Keck Observatory's Near Infrared Echelle Spectrograph (Keck-NIRSPEC) in 2017, we derive ion line-of-sight velocity maps after grouping spectra into rotational quadrants matching phases of the planetary magnetic field. We measure 0.5 km s−1 wind systems in the ionosphere consistent with predicted neutral twin-vortex flow patterns. These findings demonstrate that neutral winds in Saturn's polar regions cause the rotational period, as determined via the magnetic field, to exhibit differences and time variabilities relative to the planet's true period of rotation in a process never before seen within planetary atmospheres. * navigate_before BACK list Outline OUTLINE 1. Saturn's Weather-Driven Aurorae Modulate Oscillations in the Magnetic Field and Radio Emissions 1. Abstract 2. Plain Language Summary 3. 1. Introduction 4. 2. Data Analysis 5. 3. Results 6. 4. Discussion and Conclusions 7. Data Availability Statement 8. References * navigate_before BACK perm_media Materials MATERIALS * FIGURES navigate_next * SUPPLEMENTS navigate_next Figure 1 Predicted ion wind flows in Saturn's northern thermosphere (as observed from Earth) based on a magnetospheric (a) and thermospheric (b) source with planetary dawn on the left and dusk to the right. We adapt the predicted ion flows for a magnetospheric (G. J. Hunt et al., 2014) and atmospheric (G. Hunt et al., 2015) driver into what would be observed in the line‐of‐sight from Earth when the central meridian planetary phase (ΨN) is 0°. Colors indicate in broad‐scale the expected line‐of‐sight blue‐ and red‐Doppler shifts. Magnetic fields are not shown here for the sake of the clarity, but can be found in the original works. Figure get_app Figure 2 Auroral emission intensity maps and ion wind velocity difference maps for Ψ0°–180° and Ψ90°–270° with planetary dawn to the left and dusk to the right. We make use of the individual emission intensity and ion line‐of‐sight velocity maps for each of the four quadrant groupings of rotational phase (shown in Figure S1 in the Supporting Information) to produce average emission intensity maps for Ψ0° and Ψ180° (Ψ0°+180°), shown in panel (a), and for Ψ90° and Ψ270° (Ψ90°+270°), shown in panel (d). We also subtract the observed ion velocity at Ψ180° from Ψ0° and the velocity at Ψ270° from Ψ90° to create ion wind difference maps for Ψ0°–180° and Ψ90°–270° displayed in panels (b) and (e), respectively. Overall emission structures shown in (a) and (d) reveal a bright spot on the dusk of Ψ0°+180° and broadly symmetric emission in Ψ90°+270°. The line‐of‐sight velocity difference maps, seen in (b) and (e), show clear structures with Ψ0°–180° dominated by a blue‐shift over the pole and red‐shift on the flanks, and Ψ90°–270° highlighting more complexity. The average emission intensities and ion winds for each (taken from between the dotted horizontal lines in the maps) are illustrated in (c) and (f). These show intensities of ∼3.5 W m−2 sr−1 across the auroral region and ion wind difference flows up to ∼±0.5 km s−1, well above the errors. Figure get_app Figure 3 Our combined observed ion flows as seen from Earth with Saturnian dawn to the left and dusk to the right. Velocities are again shown at a noon magnetic phase of Ψ0°, as in Figure 1. The vectors represent flows from Figures 2b and 2e, with blue‐shifted Ψ0°–180° flowing from midnight to midday (top to bottom), and Ψ90°–270° flowing from dusk to dawn (right to left). The magnitude of the arrows is scaled with velocity up to ∼2.4 km s−1, and the blue‐to‐red color represents the magnitude in the Ψ0°–180° direction. Please note that the magnitudes of the arrows shown here correspond exactly with velocities presented in Figures 2b and 2e. A clear blue‐shift across the pole and red‐shift along the lower latitude flanks matches well with Figure 1b, making it consistent with a thermospheric origin for the ion winds. It is as yet unclear why the dawn (left) side vortex is more intense than the much weaker corresponding dusk (right) side vortex. One possibility may be that the current emerging from the dawn side vortex (Ψ90°) is higher than the one which emerges from the dusk side vortex (Ψ270°). Furthermore, it is not unreasonable to surmise that the dawn side vortex will weaken as it rotates into noon (Ψ0°) and through to the dusk side while the dusk side vortex will strengthen as it rotates into midnight (Ψ180°) through to the dawn side. Figure get_app perm_media Click here to view supplementary materials of this publication. * navigate_before BACK image Figures * navigate_before BACK perm_media Supplements * navigate_before BACK link Links LINKS * REFERENCES navigate_next * CITED BY navigate_next * RECOMMENDED navigate_next * navigate_before BACK link References * navigate_before BACK format_quote Cited by * navigate_before BACK more_horiz Recommended open_in_new View in Publisher's site Page1/7 * skip_next Next * skip_previous Previous * Go to start * Go to the end * go to page format_size Alignment format_align_left format_align_justify Font Size remove add Hyphenation close Return to default styles Reading Flow swap_vert swap_horiz fullscreen fullscreen_exit remove_circle_outline add_circle_outline search SEARCH search close group_add Copy Access more_horiz * printPrint document * Offline reading * stop offline_pin Save for offline reading Saving for offline reading • 556.6 KB Saved for offline reading Remove Removing from offline documents * library_books View Offline documents * Login / Register get_app 1.IntroductionAn abiding mystery following Cassini's extended tour of Saturn is also one of the first questions the spacecraft raised about the planet: measurements showed that Saturn's day appeared to be 6 min longer at ∼10h 45 m (Gur-nett et al., 2005) than that measured by the Voyager 1 and 2 spacecraft (Kaiser et al., 1980). Since it is improb-able that the interior of Saturn changed its rotation period over the course of only two decades, it was clear that somehow the magnetic fields above the planet were slipping relative to those generated deep within the interior (Stevenson, 2006). This mystery has remained unresolved despite nearly two decades of Cassini observations at Saturn.First detected in the radio Saturn kilometric radiation and subsequently throughout the Cassini mission, evidence for a varying planetary rotation rate has been found in numerous parameters including: magnetospheric variations in the plasma (Gurnett et al., 2007), energetic neutrals (Paranicas et al., 2005) and the axisymmetric magnetic field (Giampieri et al., 2006), as well as ultraviolet (Nichols et al., 2008) and infrared (Badman et al., 2012) auroral emissions. The rotation rate also measurably drifts with time (Kurth et al., 2008), with two independent rates in the northern and southern hemispheres (Gurnett et al., 2009), linked to the changing season (Gurnett et al., 2010). These variations are propagated throughout the Saturnian environment by two large-scale planetary period current systems flowing between the ionosphere and magnetosphere (G. J. Hunt et al., 2014).AbstractThe Cassini spacecraft revealed that Saturn's magnetic field displayed oscillations at a period originally thought to match the planetary rotation rate but later found not to. One of many proposed theories predicts that a polar twin-cell neutral weather system drives this variation, producing observable differences in flows within Saturn's ionosphere. Here, using spectral observations of auroral 𝐴𝐴H+3 emission lines taken by the Keck Observatory's Near Infrared Echelle Spectrograph (Keck-NIRSPEC) in 2017, we derive ion line-of-sight velocity maps after grouping spectra into rotational quadrants matching phases of the planetary magnetic field. We measure 0.5 km s−1 wind systems in the ionosphere consistent with predicted neutral twin-vortex flow patterns. These findings demonstrate that neutral winds in Saturn's polar regions cause the rotational period, as determined via the magnetic field, to exhibit differences and time variabilities relative to the planet's true period of rotation in a process never before seen within planetary atmospheres.Plain Language SummaryWe observed Saturn's northern aurorae in the infrared using the Keck Observatory in Mauna Kea, Hawaii over the course of June, July and August of 2017. Using this data we investigate the motion of an ion, 𝐴𝐴H+3, in the planet's upper atmosphere. This is done after first placing the data into four groups corresponding to the rotational phase of the planet's magnetic field. By doing so we are able to detect twin-vortex flows in the upper atmosphere of Saturn, consistent with theories that predict the presence of such a polar feature, thus providing direct evidence that Saturn's measured variable rotation rate is driven by these flows. These twin-vortex flows are ultimately responsible for the time differences relative to the planet's true rotation period observed throughout Saturn's planetary environment.CHOWDHURY ET AL.© 2021. The Authors.This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.Saturn's Weather-Driven Aurorae Modulate Oscillations in the Magnetic Field and Radio EmissionsM. N. Chowdhury1, T. S. Stallard1, K. H. Baines2,3, G. Provan1, H. Melin1, G. J. Hunt4, L. Moore5, J. O’Donoghue6, E. M. Thomas1, R. Wang1, S. Miller7, and S. V. Badman81School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK, 2Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, USA, 3Space Science and Engineering Center, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA, 4Blackett Laboratory, Imperial College London, London, UK, 5Center for Space Physics, Boston University, Boston, MA, USA, 6Institute for Space and Astronautical Science, JAXA, Kanagawa, Japan, 7Department of Physics and Astronomy, University College London, London, UK, 8Department of Physics, Lancaster University, Lancaster, UKKey Points:•Keck-NIRSPEC observations of Saturn's northern H3+ infrared auroral emission from 2017 are analyzed•First clear picture of how the ionosphere moves in relation to planetary period currents is provided•Saturn's measured variable rotation rate is driven by twin-vortex flows in the upper atmosphereSupporting Information:Supporting Information may be found in the online version of this article.Correspondence to:M. N. Chowdhury,nahidc14@gmail.comCitation:Chowdhury, M. N., Stallard, T. S., Baines, K. H., Provan, G., Melin, H., Hunt, G. J., et al. (2022). Saturn's weather-driven aurorae modulate oscillations in the magnetic field and radio emissions. Geophysical Research Letters, 49, e2021GL096492. https://doi.org/10.1029/2021GL096492Received 7 OCT 2021Accepted 20 DEC 2021Author Contributions:Conceptualization: T. S. Stallard, H. Melin, G. J. Hunt, L. Moore, J. O’Donoghue, E. M. Thomas, R. Wang, S. Miller, S. V. BadmanData curation: M. N. Chowdhury, T. S. Stallard, G. Provan, H. MelinFormal analysis: M. N. Chowdhury, T. S. StallardFunding acquisition: T. S. Stallard, K. H. BainesInvestigation: T. S. StallardMethodology: M. N. Chowdhury, T. S. Stallard, G. Provan, H. Melin, G. J. Hunt, S. MillerProject Administration: T. S. Stallard, K. H. Baines10.1029/2021GL096492RESEARCH LETTER1 of 7 Geophysical Research LettersCHOWDHURY ET AL.10.1029/2021GL0964922 of 7A wide range of models have been developed in order to explain the source of these planetary period cur-rents with limited observational constraints to substantiate many of them. Some models place the source with-in the magnetosphere, caused by the Enceladus torus (Burch et al., 2008; Goldreich & Farmer, 2007; Gurnett et al., 2007), interactions with Titan (Winglee et al., 2013), or periodic latitudinal oscillations in the plasma sheet (Carbary et al., 2007). It is worth noting that magnetosphere-driven models are generally unable to robustly explain the distinction between the two independent periodicities observed in each polar region. Other models suggest that the source originates within Saturn's atmosphere, the result of changing ionospheric conductivity (Gurnett et al., 2007), flows in Saturn's stratosphere driving Hall drift (Smith, 2014), or the westward drift of ionospheric Rossby waves (Smith, 2018). Conversely, an alternative theory of how these currents are driven is that ions are forced to move through polar magnetic fields by collisions with rotating twin-vortex flows within Saturn's neutral polar thermosphere (Jia et al., 2012; Smith, 2006, 2011; Southwood & Cowley, 2014)—effective-ly a form of weather-driven aurora that is itself the result of neutral and ion winds flowing in the planet's upper atmospheric layers.Tests of these theories using magnetospheric observations are difficult since both the magnetospheric currents and generated aurora are nearly identical whether they originate in the magnetosphere or the atmosphere. The only observational evidence for an atmospheric source comes from an apparent 1° modulation in the location of the planetary period auroral current layer, with maximum and minimum modulations occurring at southern magnetic phases of 270° and 90°, respectively, where local magnetic phases are analogous to magnetic longitude (G. J. Hunt et al., 2014). However, since the model predicting that these currents are driven by a thermospheric twin-cell vortex explicitly requires that the ionosphere flows in the opposite direction from other models, the motion of ions within the ionosphere provides a unique diagnostic of the source of planetary period currents (Smith, 2014).Figure 1 shows these expected ion flows as would be seen by an observer at Earth with planetary dawn to the left and dusk to the right. In the case of a magnetospheric driver, at a noon northern magnetic phase of 0° (Ψ0°) as shown in Figure 1a, ion-neutral collisions in the ionosphere lead to an anti-sunward flow (red-shifted) away from Earth-based observers over the central polar region with a return flow (blue-shifted) toward observers at lower latitudes. For an atmospheric driver at Ψ0°, seen in Figure 1b, the neutral wind drives parallel plasma flow in the ionosphere, resulting in a sunward flow (blue-shifted) toward the observer over the polar region and an anti-sunward return flow (red-shifted) away from the observer at lower latitudes (G. J. Hunt et al., 2014; G. Hunt et al., 2015; Jia et al., 2012; Southwood & Cowley, 2014). In addition, these patterns rotate with phase at the measured period of the magnetic field oscillations.2.Data AnalysisTo test the thermospheric twin-cell vortex hypothesis, we used the Keck Observatory's Near Infrared Echelle Spectrograph (Keck-NIRSPEC) (McLean et al., 1998) to scan the auroral region in a manner similar to a study at Jupiter (Johnson et al., 2017), measuring emission from 𝐴𝐴H+3—a dominant molecular ion species in Saturn's ionosphere. The peak emission altitude of 𝐴𝐴H+3 is at around 1,155 km above the atmospheric 1 bar level (T. S. Stallard et al., 2012) and is more generally found to exist between 1,000 and 2,000 km of the same altitudinal level (T. Stallard et al., 2010) which is, as demonstrated by Moore et al. (2010) and Shebanits et al. (2020), in the electrical dynamo region of the ionosphere. In a previous publication by T. S. Stallard et al. (2019), techniques were established to measure the line-of-sight velocity of 𝐴𝐴H+3 emission lines on individual nights, providing a view of the varying ionospheric velocity in the Earth's reference frame. Similar work by O’Donoghue et al. (2016) and Chowdhury et al. (2019) have also provided insights into the 𝐴𝐴H+3 aurorae at Saturn in recent years.Here, we measure the ion velocities after mapping data into four rotational bins matching the phase (ΨN) of the magnetic field oscillation resulting from the rotating current system (Provan et al., 2018): Ψ0° (315°–45°), Ψ90°(45°–135°), Ψ180° (135°–225°) and Ψ270° (225°–315°), in order to reveal the underlying ion winds that are associ-ated with the rotating current system. Tables S1 and S2 in the Supporting Information outline the corresponding night-by-night and quadrant-by-quadrant breakdown of spectra into the four aforementioned groupings of north-ern planetary magnetic phase.Saturn's auroral currents and thus our line-of-sight velocity maps consist of subcorotational flows associated with the outer magnetosphere. Both the co-rotational flows and the outer magnetosphere are thought to be broadly Resources: T. S. Stallard, G. Provan, H. MelinSoftware: M. N. Chowdhury, T. S. Stallard, G. Provan, H. Melin, E. M. Thomas, R. WangSupervision: T. S. StallardValidation: T. S. Stallard, S. Miller, S. V. BadmanVisualization: M. N. Chowdhury, T. S. Stallard, J. O’Donoghue, S. V. BadmanWriting – original draft: M. N. Chowdhury, T. S. StallardWriting – review & editing: M. N. Chowdhury, T. S. Stallard, K. H. Baines, G. Provan, H. Melin, G. J. Hunt, L. Moore, J. O’Donoghue, S. Miller, S. V. Badman sort play_circle_filled play_circle_filled arrow_back BACK CHAPTER TITLE HERE FIGURE TITLE HERE get_app All Materials (0) SHOW All materials 0 Figures 0 Tables 0 Videos 0 Audio files 0 Code snippets 0 Other files 0 fullscreen fullscreen_exit remove_circle_outline add_circle_outline play_circle_filled play_circle_filled arrow_back BACK CLOSE FIGURE TITLE HERE get_app ALL MATERIALS PUBLICATION TITLE HERE