EGU24-6547, updated on 08 Mar 2024
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-6547
EGU General Assembly 2024
© Author(s) 2024. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

PHEBUS observations of exospheric calcium and potential detection of exospheric manganese during BepiColombo first three flybys of Mercury.

Rozenn Robidel1,2, Eric Quemerais2, Jean-Yves Chaufray2, Francois Leblanc2, and Dimitra Koutroumpa2
Rozenn Robidel et al.
  • 1ESA, ESAC, Villanueva de la Cañada, Spain (rozenn.robidel@esa.int)
  • 2LATMOS-IPSL, CNRS, UVSQ, Paris-Sacaly, Sorbonne Université, Guyancourt, France

BepiColombo, the ESA/JAXA joint mission, has already performed three out of the six flybys of Mercury scheduled during its journey to the innermost planet of our solar system. The first two flybys were conducted at a similar True Anomaly Angle (TAA~265°), while the third one occurred closer to the perihelion (TAA=311°).

During these three flybys, several instruments observed the planet and its environment, including PHEBUS (Probing of Hermean Exosphere By Ultraviolet Spectroscopy), the UV spectrograph on board BepiColombo/MPO. The two visible channels of PHEBUS, centered at 404nm and 422nm, observed Mercury’s exosphere during each of the three flybys. The third flyby provided the first observations of the southern hemisphere of Mercury. Indeed, PHEBUS was pointing towards the south ecliptic direction during the third flyby while the instrument was pointing towards the north ecliptic direction during the first two flybys.

We report the detection of the calcium (Ca) emission line at 422.8nm during each of the three flybys. Our results reveal that Mercury Ca exosphere is very extended on the morning side (up to ~10,000 km of altitude) and is enhanced near the dawn region. We then discuss year-to-year variability and potential source processes.

We also report the detection of additional species with the visible channel centered at 404nm during the three flybys, potentially manganese (Mn) or potassium (K). The detection is confined to the predawn region. Mn was detected by MESSENGER at similar local times (2-5 A.M.) but at different TAA (0-70°). However, the K doublet near 404nm has never been detected by MESSENGER.

Finally, we briefly discuss the geometric configuration of the next flybys of Mercury that will take place in September 2024, December 2024 and January 2025.

How to cite: Robidel, R., Quemerais, E., Chaufray, J.-Y., Leblanc, F., and Koutroumpa, D.: PHEBUS observations of exospheric calcium and potential detection of exospheric manganese during BepiColombo first three flybys of Mercury., EGU General Assembly 2024, Vienna, Austria, 14–19 Apr 2024, EGU24-6547, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-6547, 2024.