Stochastic Models of Hot Planetary and Satellite Coronas: Suprathermal Nitrogen in Titan's Upper Atmosphere

Author: Shematovich V.I.1

Source: Solar System Research, Volume 38, Number 3, May 2004 , pp. 178-188(11)

Publisher: MAIK Nauka/Interperiodica

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Abstract:

The processes of dissociation and dissociative ionization of molecular nitrogen by solar UV radiation and by the accompanying flux of photoelectrons, as well as sputtering of the atmosphere by fluxes of magnetospheric ions and pick-up ions, are the main sources of translationally excited (hot, or suprathermal) nitrogen atoms and molecules in Titan's upper atmosphere. Since Titan does not possess an intrinsic magnetic field, ions from Saturn's magnetosphere can penetrate into the outer layers of Titan's atmosphere and sputter atoms and molecules from the atmosphere in momentum-transfer and charge exchange collisions. Atmospheric sputtering by corotating nitrogen ions and carbon-containing pick-up ions, as well as photodissociation-related losses, was considered previously by Lammer and Bauer (1993) and Shematovich et al. (2001, 2003). In this paper we investigate the processes of the formation and evolution of the fraction of suprathermal nitrogen atoms and molecules in the transition region of Titan's upper atmosphere using the previously developed Monte Carlo model for hot satellite and planetary coronas (Shematovich, 1999, 2004). It is established that the suprathermal nitrogen fraction in the transition region of Titan's upper atmosphere includes nitrogen atoms and molecules but the suprathermal nitrogen concentration is relatively small owing to high rates of escape from the atmosphere and to the efficient thermalization of suprathermal nitrogen at the altitudes of the relatively dense lower thermosphere. However, the scale height for suprathermal nitrogen in the transition region is much higher than that for the ambient atmospheric gas. Therefore, suprathermal nitrogen becomes one of the dominant components in the outer exosphere.

Document Type: Research article

DOI: 10.1023/B:SOLS.0000030857.87194.11

Affiliations: 1: Institute of Astronomy, Russian Academy of Sciences, Pyatnitskaya ul. 48, Moscow, 109017 Russia

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