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EP: Fachverband Extraterrestrische Physik

EP 1: Planets and small Objects

EP 1.8: Talk

Monday, March 20, 2023, 12:45–13:00, HSZ/0004

Analysis of IMF penetration into Mercury's Magnetosphere — •Kristin Pump, Daniel Heyner, and Ferdinand Plaschke — TU Braunschweig, IGEP, Mendelssohnstraße 3, 38106 Braunschweig

Mercury is the smallest an innermost planet of our solar system and has a dipole-dominated internal magnetic field that is relatively weak, very axisymmetric and significantly offset towards north. Through the interaction with the solar wind, this field leads to a magnetosphere. Compared to the magnetosphere of Earth, Mercury's magnetosphere is smaller and more dynamic. A semi-empirical magnetospheric model can capture the large-scale magnetospheric structures. Using the residuals between in-situ data and the model prediction we further seek to improve our understanding of the Hermean magnetosphere. To first order the magnetopause completely separates the magnetosphere from the magnetosheath and thus no magnetic field may penetrate this boundary. In reality, the magnetosheath field may diffuse across the very thin boundary within a finite time. Here, we investigate this penetration and compare the different interplanetary field (IMF) components by their ability to enter into Mercury's Magnetosphere. For this, we use in-situ MESSENGER magnetic field data to estimate the IMF for the time frame with the probe located inside the magnetosphere. The amount of penetration is found by least-square fitting to magnetospheric model results. First statistical results indicate that the penetration is stronger under southward IMF conditions.

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