Heavy Ion Flows in the Upper Ionosphere of the Venusian North Pole
Fedorov, A.; Barabash, S.; Futaana, Y.; Zhang, T. L.; Nilsson, H.; Hamrin, M.; Persson, M.; Stenberg Wieser, G.
Sweden, France, Austria
Abstract
We investigate the heavy ion density and velocity in the Venusian upper ionosphere near the North Pole, using the Ion Mass Analyzer, a part of the Analyzer of Space Plasmas and Energetic Atoms 4, together with the magnetic field instruments on Venus Express. The measurements were made during June-July 2014, covering the aerobraking campaign with lowered altitude measurements ( 130 km). The plasma scale heights are 15 km below 150-km altitude and 200 km at 150-400-km altitude. A clear trend of dusk-to-dawn heavy ion flow across the polar ionosphere was found, with speeds of 2-10 km/s. In addition, the flow has a significant downward radial velocity component. The flow pattern does not depend on the interplanetary magnetic field directions nor the ionospheric magnetization states. Instead, we suggest a thermal pressure gradient between the equatorial and polar terminator regions, induced by the decrease in density between the regions, as the dominant mechanism driving the ion flow.