Solar control on Jupiter's equatorial X-ray emissions: 26-29 November 2003 XMM-Newton observation

Branduardi-Raymont, G.; Soria, R.; Waite, J. H.; Cravens, T. E.; Ramsay, G.; Bhardwaj, Anil; Gladstone, G. R.; Elsner, R. F.; Rodriguez, P.

United States, United Kingdom, Spain

Abstract

During Nov. 26-29, 2003 XMM-Newton observed soft (0.2-2 keV) X-ray emission from Jupiter for 69 hours. The low-latitude X-ray disk emission of Jupiter is observed to be almost uniform in intensity with brightness that is consistent with a solar-photon driven process. The simultaneous light curves of Jovian equatorial X rays and solar X rays (measured by the TIMED/SEE and GOES satellites) show similar day-to-day variability. A large solar X-ray flare occurring on the Jupiter-facing side of the Sun is found to have a corresponding feature in the Jovian X rays. These results support the hypothesis that X-ray emission from Jovian low-latitudes are solar X rays scattered from the planet's upper atmosphere, and suggest that the Sun directly controls the non-auroral X rays from Jupiter's disk. Our study also suggests that Jovian equatorial X rays can be used to monitor the solar X-ray flare activity on the hemisphere of the Sun that is invisible to space weather satellites.

2005 Geophysical Research Letters
XMM-Newton SOHO 39