Low-latitude H Lyman-alpha emissions from the Galileo Ultraviolet Spectrometer

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astronomy

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Scientific paper

The processes contributing to the detailed formation of H Lyman-alpha emission in Jupiter's upper atmosphere at low latitudes are still not thoroughly known although resonant scattering of solar H Lyman-alpha photons, charged particle collisional excitation of H, dissociative exitation of H2, and hydrogenic ion recombination (H+ or H3+) have been proposed. The Galileo Ultraviolet Spectrometer (UVS) has systematically observed Jupiter's low latitude hydrogen Lyman-alpha during the first half of the prime mission. Observations from orbits G1 through G8 have provided a preliminary mapping of the Lyman-alpha distribution for most System III longitudes. These observations provide a database for examining the contribution of many of the formation mechanisms because emissions related to solar and non-solar processes are separately observed away from the auroral zones across most longitudes and for most emission angles. The Galileo UVS H Lyman-alpha data are shown and possible production mechanisms are suggested for the observed emissions.

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