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MERCURY RISING
Understanding Mercury's Magnetic Tail
by Staff Writers
College Park MD (SPX) Apr 17, 2018

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Theoretical physicists used simulations to explain the unusual readings collected in 2009 by the Mercury Surface, Space Environment, Geochemistry, and Ranging (MESSENGER) mission. The origin of energetic electrons detected in Mercury's magnetic tail has puzzled scientists. This new study, appearing in Physics of Plasmas, from AIP Publishing, provides a possible solution to how these energetic electrons form.

Magnetic material's flow inside a planet creates a global magnetic field. In Mercury, and in Earth, liquid metal currents in the planetary cores induce the planets' magnetic fields. These fields vary in shape, size, angle and strength from planet to planet, but are all important for protecting planets from solar particles.

Solar wind blasts planets with radiation and causes magnetic substorms, which we sometimes see on Earth as the northern lights. Magnetic tails or magnetotails form when intense radiation pressure from solar winds "pushes" on the planet's magnetic fields.

These tails form on the nighttime side of the planet, facing away from the Sun. On Mercury, magnetic substorms in the tail are bigger and more rapid than those observed on Earth.

Mercury's magnetic field is 100 times weaker than Earth's, so it surprised physicists that MESSENGER detected signs of energetic electrons in the planet's magnetic tail - the Hermean magnetotail.

"We wanted to find out why the satellite found energetic particles," said Xiaowei Zhou, an author of the study.

A likely candidate responsible for the presence of these energetic particles is magnetic reconnection. Magnetic reconnection occurs when the arrangement of magnetic field lines change, releasing kinetic and thermal energy.

However, in the turbulent astrophysical environment, magnetic reconnection is poorly understood. In this study, Chinese and German physicists investigated magnetic reconnection within the context of turbulence in the Hermean magnetotail.

Magnetohydrodynamic simulations and test particle calculations showed that plasmoids - distinct magnetic structures that encompass plasma - are generated during magnetic reconnection. These plasmoids accelerate energetic electrons. The simulation results are supported by MESSENGER measurements of plasmoid species and plasmoid reconnection in the Hermean magnetotail.

The researchers also used a mean-turbulence model to describe the turbulence of subgrid-scale physical processes. Acceleration processes were scaled to parameters that mimic characteristic conditions reported from the Hermean magnetotail. The simulations showed that in these conditions, turbulent plasmoid reconnection could be responsible for electron acceleration.

"We also showed that turbulence enhances reconnection by increasing the reconnection rate," Zhou said.

The team's model predicts the upper limits for turbulent plasmoid reconnection and the corresponding electron acceleration. The BepiColombo mission, due to launch October 2018, will test these predictions. The BepiColombo satellites, built to withstand the harsh, hot environment near the Sun, will be inserted into Mercury's orbit in 2025 for one Earth year to transmit observations from the planet.

"Previous satellites could not test the high energies from electrons, and one aim of this mission is to measure the energetic particles from the Hermean magnetotail with new detector technology," Zhou said. With this new technology, the researchers hope to gain a more detailed subscale view of the effects of turbulence.

"Electron Acceleration by Turbulent Plasmoid Reconnection," Xiaowei Zhou, Joerg Buechner, Fabien Widmer and Patricio A. Munoz, 2018 April 17, Physics of Plasmas


Related Links
Physics of Plasmas
News Flash at Mercury
Mars News and Information at MarsDaily.com
Lunar Dreams and more


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MERCURY RISING
Newly discovered planet is hot, metallic and dense as Mercury
Warwick UK (SPX) Mar 28, 2018
A hot, metallic, Earth-sized planet with a density similar to Mercury - situated 339 light years away - has been detected and characterised by a global team of astronomers, including the University of Warwick. Named K2-229b, the planet is almost 20% larger than Earth but has a mass which is over two-and-a-half times greater - and reaches a dayside temperature of over 2000 C (2330 Kelvin). It finds itself very close to its host star (0.012 AU, around a hundredth of the distance betwee ... read more

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