Constraining Electron-Impact Ionization of O$_2$ Through UV Aurora Observations at Ganymede
Stefan Duling, Joachim Saur, Darrell Strobel, Philippa Molyneux, Jamey R. Szalay + 1 more
TLDR
Juno UV observations quantify Ganymede's O2 electron-impact ionization, revealing rates 10x higher than photoionization and significant surface ice erosion.
Key contributions
- Developed a novel method to quantify electron-impact ionization using OI 1356 Å UV aurora observations.
- Found electron-impact ionization rates at Ganymede are at least 10x higher than photoionization rates.
- Mapped global ionization rates, with peak column rates of ~5x10^9 cm^-2s^-1 in auroral ovals.
- Estimated O2+ outflow rate of 0.1-2x10^26 s^-1, implying 0.03-0.5 cm/Myr surface ice erosion.
Why it matters
This study significantly refines our understanding of Ganymede's atmosphere and ionosphere by quantifying electron-impact ionization. It reveals that auroral activity drives substantial O2+ outflow, leading to significant surface ice erosion. This is vital for understanding icy moon evolution and potential habitability.
Original Abstract
While photoionization rates of Ganymede's O$_2$ dominated atmosphere are well constrained, the contribution of electron-impact ionization is rather uncertain. Previous quantitative estimates have relied on assumptions about densities and energy distributions of precipitating electrons, or on rare spacecraft measurements that cannot be unambiguously mapped to the regions of ionization. In this study, we present a novel approach to quantify electron-impact ionization rates directly through OI 1356 Å emission brightness observations. The analysis of measured cross sections reveals that the ionization-to-excitation ratio is limited to 10-60 over all electron energies, reducing the uncertainty of estimating ionization rates to a factor less than 6. We apply this method to Juno UVS observations of Ganymede's aurora. We find that the OI 1356 Å brightness of the auroral ovals is well described by 3-5° latitude wide Gaussian distributions centered on the open-closed field line boundary, with an average peak of 120 R. The average brightness outside the ovals in the polar and equatorial background regions is ~8 R. From these observations, we derive a global map of electron-impact ionization rates, which are at least an order of magnitude higher than photoionization rates. The estimated total global ionization rate is 1.3-7.6$\times$10$^{26}$ s$^{-1}$, with average column rates of ~5$\times$10$^{9}$ cm$^{-2}$s$^{-1}$ in the ovals and ~3$\times$10$^{8}$ cm$^{-2}$s$^{-1}$ in the background regions. Comparison of radio occultation measurements with predicted electron densities indicates that transport processes are the dominant loss mechanism in Ganymede's ionosphere. The rate of ionospheric outflow of O$_2^+$ is 0.1-2$\times$10$^{26}$ s$^{-1}$ or 0.5-11 kg s$^{-1}$, indicating 0.03-0.5 cm Myr$^{-1}$ erosion of Ganymede's surface ice.
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