Suzaku observation of Jupiter's X-rays around solar maximum

Abstract

We report on results of imaging and spectral studies of X-ray emission from Jupiter observed by Suzaku. In 2006 Suzaku had found diffuse X-ray emission in 1x20135 keV associated with Jovian inner radiation belts. It has been suggested that the emission is caused by the inverse-Compton scattering by ultra-relativistic electrons ( 50 MeV) in Jupiter's magnetosphere. To confirm the existence of this emission and to understand its relation to the solar activity, we conducted an additional Suzaku observation in 2014 around the maximum of the 24th solar cycle. As a result, we successfully found again the diffuse emission around Jupiter in 1x20135 keV and also point-like emission in 0.4x20131 keV. The luminosity of the point-like emission which was probably composed of solar X-ray scattering, charge exchange, or auroral bremsstrahlung emission increased by a factor of 5 with respect to 2006, most likely due to an increase of the solar activity. The diffuse emission spectrum in the 1x20135 keV band was well-fitted with a flat power-law function ( = 1.4 0.1 ) as in the past observation, which supported the inverse-Compton scattering hypothesis. However, its spatial distribution changed from 12 × 4 Jovian radius (Rj) to 20 × 7 Rj. The luminosity of the diffuse emission increased by a smaller factor of 3 . This indicates that the diffuse emission is not simply responding to the solar activity, which is also known to cause little effect on the distribution of high-energy electrons around Jupiter. Further sensitive study of the spatial and spectral distributions of the diffuse hard X-ray emission is important to understand how high-energy particles are accelerated in Jupiter's magnetosphere.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…