3:00 PM - 3:15 PM
[PPS05-12] Numerical Simulations on Surface Charging Properties of Lunar Surface Cavities
Keywords:the Moon, plasma, surface charging, hole and cavities, particle simulation
We set up a lunar surface with a cavity in the simulation space, and simulated the solar wind plasma flow, and the sunlight illumination and its associated photoelectron emission from the surface. The simulation results show that the surface charging within the cavity can be understood in terms of separate contributions of the solar wind plasma and the photoelectron currents. The solar wind electrons collide with the cavity wall at relatively shallow positions due to their greater thermal motions than ions. Therefore, the proportion of solar wind electrons that approach the bottom of the cavity is small, and the deepest part of the cavity surface will be charged positively. This effect will be moderated as the cavity aperture becomes greater, because it leads to the larger number of solar wind electrons approaching the bottom of the cavity. The photoelectron current basically contributes to the positive charging at the photoelectron release point, which is the well known behavior. On the cavity wall, however, the emitted and recollected photoelectrons behave as they transport negative charge to the deeper part of the cavity, which moderate the positive potential at the bottom of the cavity formed by the solar wind ions.