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MESSENGER Observations of Extreme Space Weather at Mercury. James A. Slavin Department of Atmospheric, Oceanic and Space Sciences University of Michigan. SERENA – HEWG Key Largo May 14 , 2013. Solar System’s Most Dynamic Magnetosphere.
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MESSENGER Observationsof Extreme Space Weather at Mercury James A. Slavin Department of Atmospheric, Oceanic and Space Sciences University of Michigan SERENA – HEWG Key Largo May 14, 2013
Solar System’s Most Dynamic Magnetosphere • Dipolar, axial aligned planetary magnetic field with the magnetic dipole offset 484 km north of the planetary center. • [Anderson et al., 2008; 2011] • Small magnetosphere drive by reconnection rate 10x Earth; Large flux transfer events at the dayside magnetopause; Plasmoids in the magnetotail. • [Slavin et al., 2009; 2010] • Large-amplitude ULF waves in equatorial magnetosphere and non-linear Kelvin-Helmholtz waves on magnetopause boundary – but only on the dusk-side. • [Boardsen et al., 2009; 2010; • Sundberg et al., 2011; 2012] Slavin et al. [2009]
Example – Tail Crossings Crossing #1 λ2/λ1 = 11.13 λ3/λ2 = 6.99 |BN| = 0.54 nT Crossing #2 λ2/λ1 = 11.38 λ3/λ2 = 26.81 |BN| = 3.15 nT Crossing #3 λ2/λ1 = 17.40 λ3/λ2 = 6.31 |BN| = 2.83 nT Crossing #4 λ2/λ1 = 19.70 λ3/λ2 = 14.18 |BN| = 0.57 nT Crossing #5 λ2/λ1 = 27.75 λ3/λ2 = 4.67 |BN| = 0.91 nT Subscript 1 – Normal direction
Dayside Crossing – Rotational Discontinuity λ2/λ1 = 25.18 λ3/λ2 = 17.41 |BN| = 15.94 nT Subscript 1 – Normal direction
Does Reconnection works differently at Mercury? Earth: Strong dependence on interplanetary magnetic field direction. [Mozer et al., 2011] Mercury: Reconnection is most intense when the interplanetary magnetic field is strong, but there is little or no dependence upon its direction [DiBraccio et al., 2012].
FTE Shower on April 11, 2011: IMF Bz > 0 Slavin et al. (2012)
Example: DOY 2012 135 BX (nT) BY (nT) BZ (nT) Borg et al. 2012 |B| (nT) 13 March 2013 G. A. DiBraccio
MVA: DOY 2012 135 B3 (nT) B2 (nT) B2 (nT) λ2/λ1 = 16.34 λ3/λ2 = 3.20 B1 (nT) 13 March 2013 G. A. DiBraccio
Dipolarizations • Repeated 1-s 40-nT increases in the Bz component, followed by a gradual (~10 s) decrease back are observed in the night-side plasma sheet. • [Sundberg et al., 2012]
Mystery of Mariner 10 Energetic Particle Bursts Solved: The Particles are 30 – 300 keV Electrons! Ho et al. (2012)
Why are extreme solar wind conditions important? • Does the magnetopause reach the surface of Mercury when SW ram pressure become extreme? If so, what is the effect on Sputtering and Space Weathering rates? • Are strong interplanetary magnetic fields with special orientations required to “erode” the dayside magnetosphere like at Earth? • Mercury’s metallic core extends to within 400 km of the surface; does electromagnetic induction in outer core play a significant role in shielding Mercury from the solar wind? • What effects do these extreme conditions have on magnetospheric configuration and dynamics?
Effect of Reconnection Vs. Conducting Core on Rss [Slavin and Holzer, 1979] [Schubert and Hood, 1979] [Goldstein and Suess, 1979]
Effect of Induction on Magnetopause Altitude No Induction & No Erosion: Pss ~ 1/Rss**6 [Winslow et al., 2012] Induction [Glassmeier et al., 2007] Magnetopause Inflation by Induction Magnetopause Erosion by Reconnection
Reconnection Vs. Induction Reconnection
Magnetospheric Structure • Northward displacement of magnetic equator implies substantial N-S asymmetry in the surface field. • Surface field at north pole is 3.4x larger than at south pole. • Surface area of open magnetic flux in the southern hemisphere is 4x larger than in the northern hemisphere. • Weak southern polar field and larger open field area imply greater particle-stimulated surface sputtering in the southern polar regions. Anderson et al. [this meeting]
BepiColombowill Explore Mercury’s Exposed Southern Hemisphere!