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Dive into the research topics where Bertrand Bonfond is active.

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Featured researches published by Bertrand Bonfond.


Science | 2017

Jupiter’s magnetosphere and aurorae observed by the Juno spacecraft during its first polar orbits

J. E. P. Connerney; A. Adriani; F. Allegrini; Fran Bagenal; S. J. Bolton; Bertrand Bonfond; S. W. H. Cowley; J.-C. Gérard; G. R. Gladstone; Denis Grodent; G. B. Hospodarsky; John Leif Jørgensen; W. S. Kurth; Steven M. Levin; B. H. Mauk; D. J. McComas; A. Mura; C. Paranicas; E. J. Smith; Richard M. Thorne; P. Valek; J. H. Waite

Juno swoops around giant Jupiter Jupiter is the largest and most massive planet in our solar system. NASAs Juno spacecraft arrived at Jupiter on 4 July 2016 and made its first close pass on 27 August 2016. Bolton et al. present results from Junos flight just above the cloud tops, including images of weather in the polar regions and measurements of the magnetic and gravitational fields. Juno also used microwaves to peer below the visible surface, spotting gas welling up from the deep interior. Connerney et al. measured Jupiters aurorae and plasma environment, both as Juno approached the planet and during its first close orbit. Science, this issue p. 821, p. 826 Juno investigates Jupiter’s magnetosphere and the processes that drive aurorae on the giant planet. The Juno spacecraft acquired direct observations of the jovian magnetosphere and auroral emissions from a vantage point above the poles. Juno’s capture orbit spanned the jovian magnetosphere from bow shock to the planet, providing magnetic field, charged particle, and wave phenomena context for Juno’s passage over the poles and traverse of Jupiter’s hazardous inner radiation belts. Juno’s energetic particle and plasma detectors measured electrons precipitating in the polar regions, exciting intense aurorae, observed simultaneously by the ultraviolet and infrared imaging spectrographs. Juno transited beneath the most intense parts of the radiation belts, passed about 4000 kilometers above the cloud tops at closest approach, well inside the jovian rings, and recorded the electrical signatures of high-velocity impacts with small particles as it traversed the equator.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2008

Jupiter's changing auroral location

Denis Grodent; Jean-Claude Gérard; Aikaterini Radioti; Bertrand Bonfond; Adem Saglam

[1] We examine the case of significant latitudinal shifts of the Jovian northern auroral emissions appearing in a data set spanning nine years of observations with the Hubble Space Telescope in the far ultraviolet. The extended data set makes it possible to compare the location of the main auroral emission with similar viewing geometries and satellite positions. The main auroral emission is assumed to originate from beyond the orbit of Ganymede (15 Jovian radii). At these distances, near corotation enforcement and transfer of momentum from Jupiter to the magnetospheric plasma is ensured by means of field aligned currents. The field aligned currents away from Jupiter are carried by downward energetic electrons loosing their energy to the polar atmosphere and giving rise to the main auroral emission. Analysis of the polar projected images shows that the latitudinal location of the main emission has changed by up to 3° over long periods of time. It also shows that the footprint of Ganymede follows a similar trend. We have used the VIP4 magnetic field model to map the emission down to the equatorial plane. This mapping suggests that internal variations of the current sheet parameters might be used as an alternative or complementary explanation to the changing solar wind conditions at Jupiter to explain the observed shift of auroral latitudes.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2008

Auroral polar dawn spots: Signatures of internally driven reconnection processes at Jupiter's magnetotail

Aikaterini Radioti; Denis Grodent; Jean-Claude Gérard; Bertrand Bonfond; John Clarke

[1] We report the presence of polar spots located in the dawn auroral region, based on the HSTACS 2007 campaign. We study the location of these features in the equatorial plane as well as their time scales and periodicities, based on a comprehensive series of images taken between February 21 and June 11, 2007. It is shown that the majority of polar dawn spots magnetically map to the dawn sector. Additionally, they occur quasi-periodically every 2–3 days, a periodicity observed for the first time in auroral features. Because of theirmappedlocation andtheirperiodiccycle,weinterpretthe polar dawn spots as signatures of internally driven magnetic reconnection in the Jovian magnetotail. Citation: Radioti, A.,


Geophysical Research Letters | 2015

Transient internally driven aurora at Jupiter discovered by Hisaki and the Hubble Space Telescope

Tomoki Kimura; S. V. Badman; Chihiro Tao; Kazuo Yoshioka; Go Murakami; Atsushi Yamazaki; Fuminori Tsuchiya; Bertrand Bonfond; Andrew Joseph Steffl; A. Masters; Satoshi Kasahara; H. Hasegawa; Ichiro Yoshikawa; M. Fujimoto; John Clarke

Jupiters auroral emissions reveal energy transport and dissipation through the planets giant magnetosphere. While the main auroral emission is internally driven by planetary rotation in the steady state, transient brightenings are generally thought to be triggered by compression by the external solar wind. Here we present evidence provided by the new Hisaki spacecraft and the Hubble Space Telescope that shows that such brightening of Jupiters aurora can in fact be internally driven. The brightening has an excess power up to similar to 550 GW. Intense emission appears from the polar cap region down to latitudes around Ios footprint aurora, suggesting a rapid energy input into the polar region by the internal plasma circulation process.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2011

Nightside reconnection at Jupiter: Auroral and magnetic field observations from 26 July 1998

Aikaterini Radioti; Denis Grodent; Jean-Claude Gérard; Marissa F. Vogt; M. Lystrup; Bertrand Bonfond

[1] In this study we present ultraviolet and infrared auroral data from 26 July 1998, and we show the presence of transient auroral polar spots observed throughout the postdusk to predawn local time sector. The polar dawn spots, which are transient polar features observed in the dawn sector poleward of the main emission, were previously associated with the inward moving flow resulting from tail reconnection. In the present study we suggest that nightside spots, which are polar features observed close to the midnight sector, are related to inward moving flow, like the polar dawn spots. We base our conclusions on the near‐simultaneous set of Hubble Space Telescope (HST) and Galileo observations of 26 July 1998, during which HST observed a nightside spot magnetically mapped close to the location of an inward moving flow detected by Galileo on the same day. We derive the emitted power from magnetic field measurements along the observed plasma flow bubble, and we show that it matches the emitted power inferred from HST. Additionally, this study reports for the first time a bright polar spot in the infrared, which could be a possible signature of tail reconnection. The spot appears within an interval of 30 min from the ultraviolet, poleward of the main emission on the ionosphere and in the postdusk sector planetward of the tail reconnection x line on the equatorial plane. Finally, the present work demonstrates that ionospheric signatures of flow bursts released during tail reconnection are instantaneously detected over a wide local time sector.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2016

Weakening of Jupiter's main auroral emission during January 2014

S. V. Badman; Bertrand Bonfond; M. Fujimoto; R. L. Gray; Yasumasa Kasaba; Satoshi Kasahara; Tomoki Kimura; Henrik Melin; J. D. Nichols; Andrew Joseph Steffl; Chihiro Tao; Fuminori Tsuchiya; Atsushi Yamazaki; Mizuki Yoneda; Ichiro Yoshikawa; Kazuo Yoshioka

In January 2014 Jupiters FUV main auroral oval decreased its emitted power by 70% and shifted equatorward by ∼1°. Intense, low-latitude features were also detected. The decrease in emitted power is attributed to a decrease in auroral current density rather than electron energy. This could be caused by a decrease in the source electron density, an order of magnitude increase in the source electron thermal energy, or a combination of these. Both can be explained either by expansion of the magnetosphere or by an increase in the inward transport of hot plasma through the middle magnetosphere and its interchange with cold flux tubes moving outward. In the latter case the hot plasma could have increased the electron temperature in the source region and produced the intense, low-latitude features, while the increased cold plasma transport rate produced the shift of the main oval.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014

Mapping the electron energy in Jupiter's aurora: Hubble spectral observations

Jean-Claude Gérard; Bertrand Bonfond; Denis Grodent; Aikaterini Radioti; John Clarke; G. R. Gladstone; J. H. Waite; Dmitry V. Bisikalo; V. I. Shematovich

Far ultraviolet spectral observations have been made with the Hubble Space Telescope in the time-tag mode using the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) long slit. The telescope was slewed in such a way that the slit projection scanned from above the polar limb down to midlatitudes, allowing us to build up the first spectral maps of the FUV Jovian aurora. The shorter wavelengths are partly absorbed by the methane layer overlying part of the auroral emission layer. The long-wavelength intensity directly reflects the precipitated energy flux carried by the auroral electrons. Maps of the intensity ratio of the two spectral regions have been obtained by combining spectral emissions in two wavelength ranges. They show that the amount of absorption by methane varies significantly between the different components of the aurora and inside the main emission region. Some of the polar emissions are associated with the hardest precipitation, although the auroral regions of strong electron precipitation do not necessarily coincide with the highest electron energies. Outputs from an electron transport model are used to create maps of the distribution of the characteristic electron energies. Using model atmospheres adapted to auroral conditions, we conclude that electron energies range between a few tens to several hundred keV. Comparisons of derived energies are in general agreement with those calculated from magnetosphere-ionosphere coupling models, with values locally exceeding the standard model predictions. These results will provide useful input for three-dimensional modeling of the distribution of particle heat sources into the high-latitude Jovian upper atmosphere.


Auroral Phenomenology and Magnetospheric Processes: Earth And Other Planets | 2013

When Moons Create Aurora: The Satellite Footprints on Giant Planets

Bertrand Bonfond

Auroral Phenomen Other Planets Geophysical Mon


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014

Jupiter's equatorward auroral features: possible signatures of magnetospheric injections

Maïté Dumont; Denis Grodent; Aikaterini Radioti; Bertrand Bonfond; Jean-Claude Gérard

The present study investigates the characteristics of ultraviolet auroral features located equatorward of the main emission appearing in Hubble Space Telescope images of the northern and southern Jovian hemispheres obtained in 2000–2007. On average, one feature is observed every day, but several auroral structures are occasionally seen over a wide range of local times in the same image. Several properties of these features are analyzed, such as their location, emitted power, and lifetime. Additionally, we magnetically map the auroral features to the equatorial plane using the VIPAL model in order to compare their observed properties with those of magnetospheric injections detected by the Galileo spacecraft. The equatorward auroral features show up between the Io footpath and the main auroral emission, at all System III longitudes, in agreement with Galileo measurements. Moreover, we compare the magnetic flux associated with these features with estimates of the outgoing flux related to the radial transport of plasma in the Jovian magnetosphere, and we find that they could account for at least one third of this flux. This comparative study shows that the auroral features under study are most probably related to magnetospheric injections and thus sheds light on the processes involved in the magnetosphere-ionosphere dynamics.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2017

Response of Jupiter's auroras to conditions in the interplanetary medium as measured by the Hubble Space Telescope and Juno

J. D. Nichols; S. V. Badman; Fran Bagenal; S. J. Bolton; Bertrand Bonfond; E. J. Bunce; John Clarke; J. E. P. Connerney; S. W. H. Cowley; R. W. Ebert; M. Fujimoto; Jean-Claude Gérard; G. R. Gladstone; Denis Grodent; Tomoki Kimura; W. S. Kurth; B. H. Mauk; Go Murakami; D. J. McComas; G. S. Orton; Aikaterini Radioti; Tom Stallard; Chihiro Tao; P. Valek; Richard Wilson; A. Yamazaki; Ichiro Yoshikawa

We present the first comparison of Jupiters auroral morphology with an extended, continuous and complete set of near-Jupiter interplanetary data, revealing the response of Jupiters auroras to the interplanetary conditions. We show that for ∼1-3 days following compression region onset the planets main emission brightened. A duskside poleward region also brightened during compressions, as well as during shallow rarefaction conditions at the start of the program. The power emitted from the noon active region did not exhibit dependence on any interplanetary parameter, though the morphology typically differed between rarefactions and compressions. The auroras equatorward of the main emission brightened over ∼10 days following an interval of increased volcanic activity on Io. These results show that the dependence of Jupiters magnetosphere and auroras on the interplanetary conditions are more diverse than previously thought.

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J. E. P. Connerney

Goddard Space Flight Center

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S. J. Bolton

Southwest Research Institute

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B. H. Mauk

Johns Hopkins University

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