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Sonwalkar et al. 1995
Sonwalkar, V.S., Inan, U.S. and Bell, T.F. (1995). An interpretation of a mysterious 3.0- to 4.6-kHz emission band observed on Voyager 2 near Neptune. Journal of Geophysical Research 100: doi: 10.1029/94JA02678. issn: 0148-0227.

A whistler mode interpretation is provided for the narrowband signal (f~3--4.6 kHz, Δf~200--800 Hz) detected by the plasma wave instrument on Voyager 2 during its encounter with Neptune. Our analysis indicates that this signal may have been generated in a limited spatial region and that it propagated to other regions of the Neptunian magnetosphere in the nonducted whistler mode with wave normal vectors lying close to the whisler mode resonance cone. The observed frequency variation of the emission along the Voyager 2 trajectory is consistent with this interpretation. The source location is estimated to be near the magnetic equator at L~4 and dipole longitude of 111¿W (260¿W longitude in Neptune coordinate system).

The source frequency and bandwidth are estimated to be 3.6 kHz and 300 Hz, respectively. The waves most likely would have been generated by energetic electrons with 2- to 20-keV parallel energy via a gyroresonance mechanism. Our interpretation of the narrowband emissions places the following limits on the Neptunian thermal plasma density and temperature: (1) Ne,min>0.16 el/cm3 for 1.2 RN<R5RN, (2) Ne,max=597.5 cm-3 at R=1.3RN, (3) Te,max< 500--1000¿ K at R~5RN. It is also possible that the weak UV aurora observed near Neptune could have been caused by the precipitation of energetic particles by the narrowband emission as a result of wave particle interactions. ¿American Geophysical Union 1995

BACKGROUND DATA FILES

Abstract

Keywords
Magnetospheric Physics, Magnetospheric configuration and dynamics, Magnetospheric Physics, Planetary magnetospheres (5443, 5737, 6030), Magnetospheric Physics, Solar wind/magnetosphere interactions, Radio Science, Radio astronomy
Journal
Journal of Geophysical Research
http://www.agu.org/journals/jb/
Publisher
American Geophysical Union
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