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Published byKendall Windley Modified over 9 years ago
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Planets and Solar System Science at Low Frequencies Philippe Zarka LESIA, CNRS-Observatoire de Paris France philippe.zarka@obspm.fr Towards a European Infrastructure for Lunar Observatories Bremen, 22-23/3/2005 - EADS / ASTRON / Radionet
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Limitations of ground-based LF radioastronomy : RFI (man-made, lightning spherics) Ionospheric cutoff (~10 MHz) + propagation effects (≤30 MHz) Sky background (fluctuations) IP, IS scintillations (Solar radio emissions)
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Limitations of LF radioastronomy in Earth orbit : RFI (man-made, lightning spherics) Auroral Kilometric Radiation Sky background (fluctuations) IP, IS scintillations (Solar radio emissions)
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LF Earth environment : AKR day/night (at 60 R E ) Thermal noise (≠flux) Galactic background Ionospheric LF cutoff Solar wind LF cutoff Solar emission/ burst/storm Spherics
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Galactic background for a short dipole antenna, i.e. with =8 /3, A=3 2 /8 Antenna effective area : A = k 2 with k = 3/8 ~1/8 for a short dipole, k ~N/8 for N dipoles A ~ 2 ~1/k ~ 8/N LOFAR ~ 10 4 dipoles
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Jovian radio emissions (near opposition) : Solar wind / magnetosphere interaction (auroral emissions) Io/magnetosphere interaction Io torus + Synchrotron from radiation belts (HF)
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Radiosources in Jupiter's environment
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Io-Jupiter plasma interaction
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+ Saturn, Uranus, Neptune auroral emissions : Saturn Uranus Neptune
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+ Saturn, Uranus atmospheric lightning : Saturn Uranus LF cutoff dayside peak ionospheric density
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Detectability from the ground (Earth) : In absence of solar bursts & spherics In absence of RFI / after successful mitigation ≥10-20 MHz Jovian DAM with C=( dipole / ) (b ) 1/2 ~N( b ) 1/2 ≥100 (ex : N=1, 10 kHz 1 sec) Saturn’s lightning with C ≥10 5 (N=200, 10 MHz 25 msec), without access to LF cutoff C 10 2 10 4 10 6
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Moon : Shielding of RFI, spherics, AKR, Solar emissions Only limitation to sensitivity = sky background fluctuations Ionospheric LF cutoff <<500 kHz
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Detectability from the Moon : all Jovian emissions + Saturn auroral emissions with C ≥ 100- 1000 (N=1-10, 10 kHz 1 sec) + Uranus & Neptune auroral emissions + Saturn & Uranus lightning (including LF cutoff) with C ≥ 10 4 (N=10- 100, 200 kHz 50-500 msec) C 10 2 10 4 10 6
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Long-term magnetospheric radio observations (+ multi- correlations)
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Variabilities/periodicities magnetospheric dynamics (role of SW, planetary rotation, satellite interactions, Io volcanism, short-lived bursts, substorms ?…) planetary rotation period B anomalies + secular variations Io torus probing (nKOM+Faraday effect) SW monitoring from 1 to 30 AU
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Saturn/Titan interaction (+other satellites ?) SW influence, substorms ? Uranus & Neptune auroral emissions observed only once by Voyager 2 ! Lightning : long-term monitoring, correlation with optical observations, planetary comparative meteorology
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Extrasolar Jupiter-like radio emissions at 10 pc range : Flux up to 10 5 Jupiter’s strength for magnetized hot Jupiters with solar-like stellar wind input, or unmagnetized hot Jupiters in interaction with strongly magnetized star + possible stronger stellar wind, focussing events, … C 10 3 10 5 10 7 10 9 10 5 10 3 10 1
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Magnetic Radio Bode's Law Hot Jupiters ?
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Detectability from the ground (Earth) : C 10 3 10 5 10 7 10 9 No solar bursts /spherics, RFI mitigation ≥10-20 MHz requires C≥10 7 (N=1000-10000, 1-10 MHz 1-10 sec)
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Detectability from the Moon : C 10 3 10 5 10 7 10 9 ≥1 order of magnitude better (C ≥ 10 5-6 : N=100, 1-10 MHz 1-10 sec) + access to less energetic sources (C ≥ 10 6-7 : N>>100) + access to VLF (weakly magnetized bodies)
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NB : Angular resolution required ~1°-10° D = 6-60 (18-180 km @ 100 kHz ; 1.8-18 km @ 1 MHz) if detectability of exo-planetary radio emissions same for solar-like stellar radio emissions complementarity to ground-based LOFAR difficult from space weak scattering/broadening effects at sources distances <a few 10’s pc
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possible active sounding of Terrestrial magnetosphere (~IMAGE)
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