Europlanet Science Congress 2022
Palacio de Congresos de Granada, Spain
18 – 23 September 2022
Europlanet Science Congress 2022
Palacio de Congresos de Granada, Spain
18 September – 23 September 2022
EPSC Abstracts
Vol. 16, EPSC2022-972, 2022
https://doi.org/10.5194/epsc2022-972
Europlanet Science Congress 2022
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Cold electrons at a weakly outgassing comet 

Peter Stephenson1, Marina Galand1, Jan Deca2, and Pierre Henri3,4
Peter Stephenson et al.
  • 1Imperial College London, Physics, London, United Kingdom of Great Britain – England, Scotland, Wales (p.stephenson18@imperial.ac.uk)
  • 2Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado
  • 3Lagrange, OCA, CNRS, UCA, Nice, France
  • 4LPC2E, CNRS, Orleans, France

The Rosetta spacecraft rendezvoused with comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko in August 2014 and escorted it for two years until September 2016. The plasma surrounding the comet was probed by the Rosetta Plasma Consortium (RPC), comprising five instruments. The Langmuir Probe (RPC/LAP; Engelhardt et al., 2018) and Mutual Impedance Probe (RPC/MIP; Wattieaux et al, 2020; Gilet et al., 2020) measured a cold population of electrons (< 1 eV) within the cometary environment, that was persistent throughout the mission.

Cometary electrons are typically produced at 10 eV through ionization of the neutral gas coma. This is either through photoionization, by absorption of an extreme ultraviolet (EUV) photon, or electron-impact ionization, by collisions of energetic electrons with the coma. Cold electrons are formed by cooling the warm, newly born electrons, through inelastic collisions with the cometary neutrals. Assuming they flow radially away from the nucleus, the electron cooling should only be significant for the high outgassing rates found around perihelion (Q > 3 x 1027 s-1). However, the cold population was observed at large heliocentric distances (> 3.5 au) and very weak outgassing rates (Q < 1026 s-1).

We have developed the first 3D collisional model of electrons at a comet, featuring a spherically symmetric coma of pure water.  Electric and magnetic fields are self-consistently calculated using a fully-kinetic, collisionless Particle-in-Cell simulation model (Deca et al., 2017; 2019), which are used as an input for the test particle model. Electron-neutral collisions are treated as a stochastic process. The collision processes include elastic scattering, inelastic excitations, and electron-impact ionization.

With the test particle model, we demonstrate that electrons are trapped in an ambipolar potential well around the nucleus. This greatly increases the efficiency of collisional processes compared to the case of radial outflow. A cold electron population is formed at weak outgassing rates
(Q = 1026 s-1), far below the threshold for cooling under radial outflow.

We quantify the increased efficiency of electron collisions when using the complex electric and magnetic fields, compared to radial outflow. The location of the electron cooling exobase is calculated accounting for electron trapping and compared with the cold electron measurements from Rosetta. This explains the cold electron observations at low outgassing rates.

 

Deca J, Divin A, Henri P, Eriksson A, Markidis S, et al. 2017. Physical Review Letters. 118(20):205101
Deca J, Henri P, Divin A, Eriksson A, Galand M, et al. 2019. Phys. Rev. Lett. 123:55101
Engelhardt IAD, Eriksson AI, Vigren E, Valières X, Rubin M, et al. 2018. 15
Gilet N, Henri P, Wattieaux G, Traoré N, Eriksson AI, et al. 2020. A&A. 640:A110–A110
Wattieaux G, Henri P, Gilet N, Vallières X, Deca J. 2020. A&A. 638:A124–A124

How to cite: Stephenson, P., Galand, M., Deca, J., and Henri, P.: Cold electrons at a weakly outgassing comet , Europlanet Science Congress 2022, Granada, Spain, 18–23 Sep 2022, EPSC2022-972, https://doi.org/10.5194/epsc2022-972, 2022.

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