EPSC Abstracts
Vol. 18, EPSC-DPS2025-796, 2025, updated on 09 Jul 2025
https://doi.org/10.5194/epsc-dps2025-796
EPSC-DPS Joint Meeting 2025
© Author(s) 2025. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
On the equatorial dayside ionosphere of Saturn – In-situ observations give evidence for a dynamic and layered structure in disequilibrium
Jan-Erik Wahlund1, Anders Eriksson1, Michiko Morooka1, Stephan Buchert1, Moa Persson1, Erik Vigren1, Joshua Dreyer2, William Kurth3, Jack Waite4, Jean-Pierre Lebreton5, William Farrell6, and Ingo Müller-Wodarg7
Jan-Erik Wahlund et al.
  • 1Swedish Institute of Space Physics, Uppsala Division, Uppsala, Sweden (jwe@irfu.se)
  • 2Royal Observatory of Belgium, Brussels, Belgium
  • 3University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa, USA
  • 4Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, USA
  • 5Laboratoire de Physique et Chimie de l’Environnement et de l’Espace (LPC2E), CNRS-Université d’Orléans-CNES, France
  • 6NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland, USA
  • 7Imperial College London, UK

The Cassini observations of Saturn’s ionosphere during the proximal orbits 288-293 in the altitude range 1450 – 4000 km (above 1-bar level) are revisited. A thorough re-analysis is made of all 159 available Langmuir probe sweeps of the Radio & Plasma Wave Science (RPWS) measurements. We relate them to the RPWS plasma wave inferred electron number densities and compare them with the available Ion Neutral Mass Spectrometer (INMS) measurements of the H+and H3+ number densities. Different analysis methods are used by RPWS to provide consistent electron number density values for the whole measured altitude interval. Consistent RPWS electron number density (ne) and INMS positively charged ion number density (ni+) profiles are derived for altitudes above ~2200 km. Below this altitude the inability of INMS to measure ions above 8 amu at the 34 km/s flyby speed lead us to infer the presence of heavy ions (> 8 amu) and a negatively charged ion component, presumably related to infalling material from the D-ring of Saturn with its associated local ion-molecule-aerosol chemistry. This lower altitude region shows a highly time variable layered structure. The Langmuir probe data in this region are strongly affected by secondaries emitted from the spacecraft and sensor surfaces when traversing a molecule-rich atmosphere at 34 km/s. There are clear signatures of secondary electron and ion emissions from the spacecraft and sensor surfaces in the data. In the Langmuir probe sweep analysis, we correct for the effect of such impact-generated products. This gives corrected total ion number densities that can be compared to the INMS ion number densities and the electron number densities. From this analysis the number of negative ions and/or nm-sized aerosol/dust particles can be constrained. A clear ionospheric peak is not identified, not even at the lowest observed altitude of approximately 1450 km. There are clear latitudinal variations and temporal evolving structures, which we infer are representative of the difference in infalling material from different regions of the D-ring. In addition, there are indications of a strong heating source for the ambient electrons that are well above expected thermal equilibrium levels (up to 4000 K). The cause of this heating is unknown but may be linked to collisional deacceleration of infalling ring material. The observational profiles presented here can be used for ionosphere theory/model comparisons in the future.

How to cite: Wahlund, J.-E., Eriksson, A., Morooka, M., Buchert, S., Persson, M., Vigren, E., Dreyer, J., Kurth, W., Waite, J., Lebreton, J.-P., Farrell, W., and Müller-Wodarg, I.: On the equatorial dayside ionosphere of Saturn – In-situ observations give evidence for a dynamic and layered structure in disequilibrium, EPSC-DPS Joint Meeting 2025, Helsinki, Finland, 7–12 Sep 2025, EPSC-DPS2025-796, https://doi.org/10.5194/epsc-dps2025-796, 2025.