The Influence of Varying Spacecraft Potentials and Debye Lengths on In Situ Low‐Energy Ion Measurements

Low‐energy ions are difficult to measure, mainly due to spacecraft charging. The ions are attracted to or repelled from the charged surface prior to detection, which changes both the energy and travel direction of the ions. This results in distortions of the data, and the changed travel directions d...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of geophysical research. Space physics 2020-04, Vol.125 (4), p.n/a
Hauptverfasser: Bergman, Sofia, Stenberg Wieser, Gabriella, Wieser, Martin, Johansson, Fredrik Leffe, Eriksson, Anders
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Low‐energy ions are difficult to measure, mainly due to spacecraft charging. The ions are attracted to or repelled from the charged surface prior to detection, which changes both the energy and travel direction of the ions. This results in distortions of the data, and the changed travel directions distort the effective field of view (FOV) of the instrument performing the measurements. The ion composition analyzer (RPC‐ICA) was measuring positive ions down to an energy of a few eV around comet 67P/Churyumov‐Gerasimenko. Low‐energy ions play important parts in processes in the cometary environment, but the FOV of RPC‐ICA has been shown to get severely distorted at low ion energies. Several factors are believed to affect the distortion level. In this study we use the Spacecraft Plasma Interaction Software (SPIS) to investigate the influence of varying spacecraft potentials and Debye lengths on the FOV distortion of RPC‐ICA. We show that the distortion level is dependent on the Debye length of the surrounding plasma, but the sensitivity varies substantially between different viewing directions of the instrument. We also show that a small nonlinearity exists in the relation between FOV distortion, ion energy, and spacecraft potential, mainly caused by the photoemission and bulk flow of the cometary plasma. Key Points We model the low‐energy field of view of the ion composition analyzer on Rosetta for varying spacecraft potentials and Debye lengths The field of view distortion is sensitive to changes in the Debye length, but the sensitivity varies between different viewing directions A small nonlinearity is found in the relation between field of view distortion, ion energy, and spacecraft potential
ISSN:2169-9380
2169-9402
2169-9402
DOI:10.1029/2020JA027870