On the cause of Saturn's plasma periodicity

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Abstract

Periodic plasma enhancements are examined for all Cassini orbits from December 29, 2005 through September 7, 2006. The events, which have UT durations of 3-4 hours, are centered near SLS3 longitude 10° at radial distances near 15 Rs and at larger W longitudes at larger distances, reaching 180°W by 49 Rs. Magnetic-field data within the events and outside 30 to 35 Rs show signatures of neutral-sheet crossings and magnetic reconnection (i.e., plasmoids). We conclude that plasmoids move outward from 30-35 RS along a spiral path that rotates with the planet. The duration of these events is similar to that of SKR events, and they are ordered in the SKR-based SLS3 longitude system. A conceptual model, in which the plasmoids are triggered in the pre-midnight quadrant following (with a predictable delay) the appearance of SKR at the magnetopause and then propagate outward in a rotating spiral pattern, can explain the connection among periodicities observed in Saturn's charged particles, magnetic fields, and kilometric radiation. Copyright 2008 by the American Geophysical Union.

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Burch, J. L., Goldstein, J., Mokashi, P., Lewis, W. S., Paty, C., Young, D. T., … André, N. (2008). On the cause of Saturn’s plasma periodicity. Geophysical Research Letters, 35(14). https://doi.org/10.1029/2008GL034951

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