[1] On 12 March 2008, the Cassini spacecraft made a close encounter with the Saturnian moon Enceladus, passing within 52 km of the moon. The spacecraft trajectory was intentionally-oriented in a southerly direction to create a close alignment with the intense water-dominated plumes emitted from the south polar region. During the passage, the Cassini Radio and Plasma Wave System (RPWS) detected two distinct radio signatures: 1) Impulses associated with small water-ice dust grain impacts and 2) an upper hybrid (UH) resonance emission that both intensified and displayed a sharp frequency decrease in the near-vicinity of the moon. The frequency decrease of the UH emission is associated with an unexpectedly sharp decrease in electron density from ∼90 el/cm3 to below 20 el/cm3 that occurs on a time scale of a minute near the closest encounter with the moon. In this work, we consider a number of scenarios to explain this sharp electron dropout, but surmise that electron absorption by ice grains is the most likely process.
CITATION STYLE
Farrell, W. M., Kurth, W. S., Gurnett, D. A., Johnson, R. E., Kaiser, M. L., Wahlund, J. E., & Waite, J. H. (2009). Electron density dropout near Enceladus in the context of water-vapor and water-ice. Geophysical Research Letters, 36(10). https://doi.org/10.1029/2008GL037108
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