2:15 PM - 2:30 PM
[PPS01-15] EMIC Waves at Ganymede Detected by Juno’s Magnetic Field Observation

Keywords:Jupiter, Ganymede, EMIC wave, Juno
In this study, we investigate Juno’s magnetic field data obtained in the Ganymede flyby and examine the low-frequency wave characteristics. The Magnetic Field Investigation (MAG; Connerney et al., 2017) onboard Juno measured the magnetic field at a rate of ~64 Hz during the flyby. We use wavelet transform to examine low frequency waves in 10-2–101 Hz. The wavelet scalogram from the observed magnetic field data shows enhancement of wave amplitude near the local cyclotron frequency (fi) of ions with mass-per-charge of i = 1, 2, 16, and 32 AMU/q inside the Ganymede magnetosphere. We then take the singular value decomposition (SVD) method (Santolík et al., 2003) and calculate wave planarity, polarization, and wave normal angle to interpret the wave characteristics. Based on the wave analysis with the SVD method, we find that the EMIC waves associated with 32-AMU/q ions exhibited left-handed polarization in the Ganymede magnetosphere. We also provide the hodogram analysis near f16because the rotational direction was not interpreted accurately from the SVD-derived polarization values due to the low planarity near f16. The hodogram shows clear right-handed polarization just below f16, which indicates the presence of the R-mode EMIC waves associated with 16-AMU/q ions. Combined with the results from the simultaneous ion measurements, we conclude that the detected EMIC waves are associated with O+ and O2+ pickup ions originally from Ganymede. We also suggest that excitation process of the EMIC waves associated with pickup ions is shared in the plasma downstream of Io and Ganymede. This study provides an example of thorough examination of low frequency waves in a compact magnetosphere and imprints a framework that could be extended to similar wave analysis on other compact magnetospheres such as Mercury’s.