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Simultaneous Observation of Jovian Radio Emissions by Cassini and Wind
- Publication Year :
- 1999
- Publisher :
- United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 1999.
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Abstract
- During the Cassini instrument checkout interval in January 1999 as the spacecraft was making a distant (0.6 AU) swing by Earth, the radio and plasma wave receiver (RPWS) detected radio emission from the sun, Earth, and Jupiter, the latter including both the hectometric (HOM) and decametric (DAM) components. The WAVES experiment on the Wind spacecraft in orbit near Earth was also making observations of Jupiter at this same time. By combining the RPWS and WAVES data sets, we are able to provide some insight into the instantaneous beaming of Jovian radio emissions. As seen by Jupiter, Cassini and Wind were a few degrees apart during this period, yet the correlation between Jovian DAM arcs observed by the two spacecraft suggests that the beam width is even narrower and does not simultaneously illuminate both. The only earlier spacecraft capable, in principle, of making these observations were Voyager-1 and 2, but their sensitivity to DAM emissions was too limited to reliably measure the instantaneous beaming. The beam width implied by the RPWS-WAVES measurements is approximately the same as the angle through which Jupiter rotates while an arc (at a fixed frequency) is visible. The HOM Jovian emissions, on the other hand, seem similar as observed by RPWS and WAVES, consistent with earlier Wind-Ulysses measurements indicating a somewhat broader beam width.
- Subjects :
- Lunar And Planetary Exploration
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- NASA Technical Reports
- Publication Type :
- Report
- Accession number :
- edsnas.19990089280
- Document Type :
- Report