Inversion of Upstream Solar Wind Parameters from Tianwen-1 H-ENA Observations at Mars
- 1State Key Laboratory of Space Weather, National Space Science Center, CAS, Beijing, China(ytzhang@nssc.ac.cn)
- 2Key Laboratory of Solar Activity and Space Weather, National Spcae Science Center, CAS, Beijing, China
- 3Key Laboratory of Science and Technology on Space Environment Situational Awareness, CAS, Beijing, China
- 4Beijing Key Laboratory of Space Environment Exploration, Beijing, China
- 5Institute of Science and Technology for Deep Space Exploration, Nanjing University, Suzhou, China
- 6University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China
- 7Department of Space Physics, School of Electronic Information, Wuhan University, Wuhan, China
An algorithm has been developed to invert the solar wind parameters from the hydrogen energetic neutral atom (H-ENA) measured in near-Mars space. Supposing the H-ENA is produced by change exchange collision between protons that originated in the solar wind and neutrals in the exosphere, an H-ENA model is established based on the magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulation of the solar wind interaction with Mars, to study the H-ENA characteristics. It is revealed that the solar wind H-ENAs are high-speed, low-temperature beams, just like the solar wind, while the magnetosheath H-ENAs are slower and hotter, with broader energy distribution. Assuming Maxwellian velocity distribution, the solar wind H-ENA flux is best fitted by a Gaussian function, from which the solar wind velocity, density, and temperature can be retrieved. Further investigation, based on the ENA flux simulated by the H-ENA model, reveals that the accuracy of inversed solar wind parameters is related to the angular and energy resolutions of the ENA detector. Finally, the algorithm is verified using the H-ENA observations from the Tianwen-1 mission. The upstream solar wind velocity when inversed is close to that of the in situ plasma measurement. Our result suggests the solar wind parameters inversed from H-ENA observation could be an important supplement to the dataset supporting studies on the Martian space environment, where long-term continuous monitoring of the upstream SW condition is lacking.
How to cite: Zhang, Y., Li, L., Xie, L., Kong, L., Li, W., Ma, J., Tang, B., Qiao, F., Wang, L., Jin, T., and Zhang, A.: Inversion of Upstream Solar Wind Parameters from Tianwen-1 H-ENA Observations at Mars, EGU General Assembly 2024, Vienna, Austria, 14–19 Apr 2024, EGU24-13783, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-13783, 2024.