- Southwest Research Institute, Department of Space Science, San Antonio, Texas, United States of America (fallegrini@swri.edu)
We report on observations of negative carbon and oxygen pickup ions (PUIs) originating from dust orbiting Jupiter. The PUIs are observed at altitudes of a few thousand kilometers (~4,800 – 10,200 km) above the 1-bar level of Jupiter’s atmosphere and up to ~11,000 – 15,000 km from the equatorial plane, thus providing constraints on the location of the dust population and its composition. The Jovian Auroral Distributions Experiment – Electron sensors on Juno detect these PUIs because of the combination of a fast-moving spacecraft and the large Keplerian orbital speed of the dust near Jupiter. We demonstrate that this scenario is consistent with the observations. We find a PUI C/O ratio of 10 ± 5 and a PUI energy release of ~11 ± 9 eV. Electron stimulated desorption is a likely process forcreating these PUIs. The dust is well inside the halo population and likely carbonaceous.
How to cite: Allegrini, F., Szalay, J., McComas, D., Ebert, R., Bolton, S., Clark, G., Connerney, J., Kurth, W., Louarn, P., Mauk, B., Pontoni, A., Saur, J., Valek, P., Wang, J.-Z., and Wilson, R.: Detection of negative carbon and oxygen pickup ions from dust orbiting Jupiter, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14123, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14123, 2026.