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Magnetospheric Drivers of Auroral Variations at Jupiter
  • Zhonghua Yao,
  • Bertrand Bonfond,
  • Denis Grodent
Zhonghua Yao
Institute of Geology and Geophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Corresponding Author:z.yao@ucl.ac.uk

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Bertrand Bonfond
Université de Liège
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Denis Grodent
Université de Liège
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Abstract

Although mass and energy in Jupiter's magnetosphere mostly come from the innermost Galilean moon Io's volcanic activity, solar wind perturbations can play crucial roles in releasing the magnetospheric energy and powering aurorae in Jupiter's polar regions. The relative importance of solar wind and internal processes in driving Jupiter's auroras remains poorly understood. Recently, the contemporaneous measurements from NASA Juno mission and the Hubble Space Telescope provide an unprecedented opportunity to determine the magnetospheric drivers of auroral variations at Jupiter, and key evidence on how solar wind would affect the auroral brightening. In this presentation, we will discuss several important advances on several distinctive auroral morphologies at Jupiter, i.e., auroral dawn storm, the main auroral brightening and auroral injection processes. We find that magnetic reconnection and dipolarization play crucial roles in driving these auroras, and the auroral drivers for the Earth and Jupiter have more in common than ever expected.