We present observations of significant dynamics within two UV auroral storms observed on Saturn using the Hubble Space Telescope in April/May 2013. Specifically, we discuss bursts of auroral emission observed at the poleward boundary of a solar wind-induced auroral storm, propagating at ∼330% rigid corotation from near ∼01h LT toward ∼08h LT. We suggest that these are indicative of ongoing, bursty reconnection of lobe flux in the magnetotail, providing strong evidence that Saturn's auroral storms are caused by large-scale flux closure. We also discuss the later evolution of a similar storm and show that the emission maps to the trailing region of an energetic neutral atom enhancement. We thus identify the auroral form with the upward field-aligned continuity currents flowing into the associated partial ring current.© 2014. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Nichols, J. D., V.badman, S., Baines, K. H., Brown, R. H., Bunce, E. J., Clarke, J. T., … Stallard, T. S. (2014). Dynamic auroral storms on Saturn as observed by the hubble space telescope. Geophysical Research Letters, 41(10), 3323–3330. https://doi.org/10.1002/2014GL060186
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