화학공학소재연구정보센터
Science, Vol.276, No.5316, 1239-1241, 1997
Europas Magnetic Signature - Report from Galileos-Pass on 19-December-1996
On 19 December 1996 as Galileo passed close to Jupiter’s moon, Europa, the magnetometer measured substantial departures from the slowly Varying background field of Jupiter’s magnetosphere. Currents coupling Europa to Jupiter’s magnetospheric plasma could produce perturbations of the observed size. However, the trend of the field perturbations is here modeled as the signature of a Europa-centered dipole moment whose maximum surface magnitude is similar to 240 nanotesla, giving a rough upper limit to the internal field. The dipole orientation is oblique to Europa’s spin axis. This orientation may not be probable for a field generated by a core dynamo, but higher order multipoles may be important as they are at Uranus and Neptune. Although the data can be modeled as contributions of an internal field of Europa, they do not confirm its existence. The dipole orientation is also oblique to the imposed field of Jupiter and thus not directly produced as a response to that field. Close to Europa, plasma currents appear to produce perturbations with scale sizes that are smalt compared with a Europa radius.