EGU24-10327, updated on 08 Mar 2024
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-10327
EGU General Assembly 2024
© Author(s) 2024. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Accuracy of the Scalar Magnetometer aboard ESA's JUICE Mission

Christoph Amtmann1,2, Andreas Pollinger2, Michaela Ellmeier1,2, Michele Dougherty3, Patrick Brown3, Roland Lammegger1, Alexander Betzler1,2, Martín Agú2, Christian Hagen2, Irmgard Jernej2, Josef Wilfinger2, Richard Baughen3, Alex Strickland3, and Werner Magnes2
Christoph Amtmann et al.
  • 1Graz University of Technology, Institute of Experimental Physics, Austria (christoph.amtmann@tugraz.at)
  • 2Space Research Institute, Austrian Academy of Sciences, 8042 Graz, Austria
  • 3Blackett Laboratory, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom SW7 2BW

The presentation discusses the accuracy of the scalar Coupled Dark State Magnetometer on board the Jupiter Icy Moon Explorer (JUICE) mission of the European Space Agency. The scalar magnetometer MAGSCA is part of the J-MAG instrument.

MAGSCA is an optical, omni-directional scalar magnetometer based on coherent population trapping, a quantum interference effect, within the hyperfine manifold of the 87Rb D1 line. The measurement principle is only based on natural constants and therefore, it is in principle drift free and no calibration is required. However, the technical realisation can influence the measurement accuracy.
The most dominating effects are heading characteristics, which are deviations of the magnetic field strength measurements from the ambient magnetic field strength.

The verification of the accuracy and precision of the instrument is required to ensure its compliance with the performance requirement of the mission: 0.2 nT (1-σ).
The verification is carried out with four dedicated sensor orientations in a Merritt coil system, which is located in the geomagnetic Conrad observatory. The coil system is used to compensate the Earth’s magnetic field and to apply appropriate test fields to the sensor. 

A novel method is presented which separates the heading characteristics of the instrument from residual (offset) fields within the coil system by fitting a mathematical model to the measured data. It allows verifying that the MAGSCA sensor unit does not have a measurable remanent magnetisation as well as that the desired accuracy of 0.2 nT (1-σ) is achieved by the MAGSCA flight hardware for the JUICE Mission.

How to cite: Amtmann, C., Pollinger, A., Ellmeier, M., Dougherty, M., Brown, P., Lammegger, R., Betzler, A., Agú, M., Hagen, C., Jernej, I., Wilfinger, J., Baughen, R., Strickland, A., and Magnes, W.: Accuracy of the Scalar Magnetometer aboard ESA's JUICE Mission, EGU General Assembly 2024, Vienna, Austria, 14–19 Apr 2024, EGU24-10327, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-10327, 2024.