Search Publications

Composition of quasi-stationary solar wind flows from Ulysses/Solar Wind Ion Composition Spectrometer
DOI: 10.1029/1999JA000358 Bibcode: 2000JGR...10527217V

Geiss, J.; Wimmer-Schweingruber, R. F.; Schwadron, N. A. +6 more

Using improved, self-consistent analysis techniques, we determine the average solar wind charge state and elemental composition of nearly 40 ion species of He, C, N, O, Ne, Mg, Si, S, and Fe observed with the Solar Wind Ion Composition Spectrometer on Ulysses. We compare results obtained during selected time periods, including both slow solar wind…

2000 Journal of Geophysical Research
Ulysses 445
Solar wind observations over Ulysses' first full polar orbit
DOI: 10.1029/1999JA000383 Bibcode: 2000JGR...10510419M

Balogh, A.; McComas, D. J.; Goldstein, B. E. +7 more

This study examines solar wind plasma and magnetic field observations from Ulysses' first full polar orbit in order to characterize the high-latitude solar wind under conditions of decreasing and low solar activity. By comparing observations taken over nearly all heliolatitudes and two different intervals covering the same radial distances, we are…

2000 Journal of Geophysical Research
Ulysses 408
Rigidity dependence of cosmic ray proton latitudinal gradients measured by the Ulysses spacecraft: Implications for the diffusion tensor
DOI: 10.1029/2000JA000153 Bibcode: 2000JGR...10527447B

Potgieter, M. S.; Heber, B.; Burger, R. A.

The latitudinal gradient of cosmic ray protons observed by Ulysses during September 1994 to July 1995 is small, and it increases as function of rigidity up to ~2 GV and then decreases. Although previous drift models could reproduce the observed small positive gradient for an A>0 solar polarity cycle, they produced a maximum at a rigidity well b…

2000 Journal of Geophysical Research
Ulysses 240
Aspects of the mass distribution of interstellar dust grains in the solar system from in situ measurements
DOI: 10.1029/1999JA900359 Bibcode: 2000JGR...10510343L

Krüger, H.; Grün, E.; Landgraf, M. +2 more

The in situ detection of interstellar dust grains in the solar system by the dust instruments on-board the Ulysses and Galileo spacecraft as well as the recent measurements of hyperbolic radar meteors give information on the properties of the interstellar solid particle population in the solar vicinity. Especially the distribution of grain masses …

2000 Journal of Geophysical Research
Ulysses 149
A global MHD solar wind model with WKB Alfvén waves: Comparison with Ulysses data
DOI: 10.1029/1999JA000233 Bibcode: 2000JGR...10512675U

Goldstein, Melvyn L.; Usmanov, Arcadi V.; Besser, Bruno P. +1 more

We use a steady state global axisymmetric MHD model to reproduce quantitatively the Ulysses observations during its first fast latitude traversal in 1994-1995. In particular, we are able to account for the transformation of a surface dipole magnetic field near the Sun into the configuration observed at large heliocentric distances. The MHD equatio…

2000 Journal of Geophysical Research
Ulysses 147
Implications of Solar Wind Composition for Cometary X-Rays
DOI: 10.1086/317176 Bibcode: 2000ApJ...544..558S

Schwadron, N. A.; Cravens, T. E.

Solar wind composition provides a strong source of variability for cometary X-rays. Using recently constrained composition observations from the Solar Wind Ion Composition Spectrometer on the Ulysses spacecraft (SWICS/Ulysses) and information on ion-neutral charge-transfer collisions, we model cometary X-ray emission and its variability. Fast and …

2000 The Astrophysical Journal
Ulysses 142
Variations of Saturn's radio rotation period measured at kilometer wavelengths
DOI: 10.1029/1999JA005089 Bibcode: 2000JGR...10513089G

Lecacheux, Alain; Galopeau, Patrick H. M.

The Unified Radio and Plasma Wave (URAP) experiment on the interplanetary spacecraft Ulysses is able to detect the Saturnian kilometric radiation (SKR) thanks to the high sensitivity of the receiver and in spite of the remoteness of the planet (8-13 AU). Our knowledge about Saturn comes essentially from the observations by the two Voyager spacecra…

2000 Journal of Geophysical Research
Ulysses 141
On the evolution of outward and inward Alfvénic fluctuations in the polar wind
DOI: 10.1029/1999JA000276 Bibcode: 2000JGR...10515959B

Bavassano, B.; Pietropaolo, E.; Bruno, R.

Plasma and magnetic field measurements by Ulysses are used to investigate the radial evolution of hourly-scale Alfvénic fluctuations in the polar wind. The data span from 1.4 to 4.3 AU in heliocentric distance. Different radial regimes at different distances emerge. Inside about 2.5 AU the large outward traveling fluctuations decrease faster, in t…

2000 Journal of Geophysical Research
Ulysses 112
A Jet Model for the Afterglow Emission from GRB 000301C
DOI: 10.1086/317814 Bibcode: 2000ApJ...545...56B

Menten, K. M.; Galama, T. J.; Berger, E. +11 more

We present broadband radio observations of the afterglow of GRB 000301C, spanning from 1.4 to 350 GHz for the period of 3-130 days after the burst. These radio data, in addition to measurements in the optical bands, suggest that the afterglow arises from a collimated outflow, i.e., a jet. To test this hypothesis in a self-consistent manner, we emp…

2000 The Astrophysical Journal
Ulysses 107
Solar wind electron suprathermal strength and temperature gradients: Ulysses observations
DOI: 10.1029/2000JA900039 Bibcode: 2000JGR...10518337M

Maksimovic, Milan; Gary, S. Peter; Skoug, Ruth M.

We use observations from the Ulysses electron spectrometer to examine global trends of the electron suprathermal population and to study, for the first time, the electron core, halo, and total temperature gradients in the fast solar wind over the poles. We use a data set covering the period from the beginning of the mission (1990, day of year 322)…

2000 Journal of Geophysical Research
Ulysses 95