Mercury's Exosphere: Observations During MESSENGER's First Mercury Flyby
Science2008Vol. 321(5885), pp. 92–94
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2008 papers
W. E. McClintock, E. T. Bradley, Ronald J. Vervack, R. M. Killen, Ann L. Sprague, N. R. Izenberg, Sean C. Solomon
Abstract
During MESSENGER's first Mercury flyby, the Mercury Atmospheric and Surface Composition Spectrometer measured Mercury's exospheric emissions, including those from the antisunward sodium tail, calcium and sodium close to the planet, and hydrogen at high altitudes on the dayside. Spatial variations indicate that multiple source and loss processes generate and maintain the exosphere. Energetic processes connected to the solar wind and magnetospheric interaction with the planet likely played an important role in determining the distributions of exospheric species during the flyby.
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