4:15 PM - 4:30 PM
[PPS01-10] Plasma Sheet Conditions at Europa’s Orbit Retrieved from Lead Angle of the Satellite Auroral Footprints

Keywords:Jupiter, Europa, Footprint aurora, Hubble Space Telescope
The purpose of this study is to retrieve changes in the plasma sheet parameters, such as mass density and temperature, from temporal variations in the footprint lead angle. We analyzed far-ultraviolet images of Jupiter’s northern hemisphere taken in 2014 and 2022 by the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) on board the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). The equatorial lead angle of Europa’s main-Alfvén-wing aurora was measured using the latest field model JRM33 (Connerney et al., 2022) combined with the current sheet model (Connerney et al., 2020).
We found a temporal variation in the equatorial lead angle at a given longitude between 2014 and 2022: the lead angle was larger in 2022. To interpret the observed variation, we developed a simple model that traces the propagation of the Alfvén waves from Europa to Jupiter under various sets of plasma sheet parameters (plasma mass density and ion temperature) and estimates the equatorial lead angle of Europa’s footprint based on travel time of the wavefront. This enables us to retrieve the plasma sheet conditions from the footprint lead angle. We successfully retrieved both plasma mass density and ion temperature in the plasma sheet at Europa’s orbit. We found that, in October 2022, the plasma sheet was denser (1708 amu cm-3) and hotter (195 eV) than January 2014 (1207 amu cm-3 and 87 eV). The retrieved plasma sheet parameters were in good agreement with the previous in-situ observations by the Galileo spacecraft (Bagenal et al., 2015). This study revealed that the temporal variation in the plasma sheet parameters at Europa’s orbit can account for the changes in the footprint lead angle.