Observations of Modulation of Ion Flux in the Coma of Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko
Altwegg, K.; Nilsson, H.; Goldstein, R.; Rubin, M.; Eriksson, A. I.; Burch, J. L.; Llera, K.
United States, Switzerland, Sweden
Abstract
On 6-8 June 2015, the Ion and Electron Sensor on board Rosetta observed keV-range water-group pickup ions arriving from the solar direction. Based on magnetic field intensification and variations, the appearance of the ions was likely to have been caused by a coronal mass ejection. During the 3-day period when Rosetta was 200 km from the comet, peak ion energy/charge (E/q) varied over a range from 50 eV to 1 keV in concert with neutral gas density variations caused by the rotation of the comet and its variable solar illumination. Thermal ion densities showed the same variations. The neutral density variations provided a unique opportunity to observe the repeated slowing of the solar wind by mass loading caused by charge exchange between energetic water-group ions and thermal water-group molecules. Such solar wind slowing was observed previously only by flyby missions that provided single events.