Abstract
Comet Siding Spring C/2013 A1 will pass Mars on 19 October 2014, entailing particle and dust precipitation in the Martian upper atmosphere and a potential dust hazard for orbiters. An estimate of the flux of energetic O+ ions picked up by the solar wind from the cometary coma is shown, with an increase of the O+ flux above 50 keV by 2 orders of magnitude. While the ionization of Mars' upper atmosphere by precipitating O+ ions is expected to be negligible compared to solar EUV-XUV ionization, it is of the same order of magnitude at 110 km altitude during the cometary passage, leading to detectable increases in ionospheric densities. Cometary O+ pickup ion precipitation is expected to be the major nightside ionization source, creating a temporary ionosphere and a global airglow. These effects are dependent on the solar and cometary activities at the time of the encounter. © 2014. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
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CITATION STYLE
Gronoff, G., Rahmati, A., Wedlund, C. S., Mertens, C. J., Cravens, T. E., & Kallio, E. (2014). The precipitation of keV energetic oxygen ions at Mars and their effects during the comet Siding Spring approach. Geophysical Research Letters, 41(14), 4844–4850. https://doi.org/10.1002/2014GL060902
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