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Featured researches published by Peter Wurz.


Science | 2009

Global Observations of the Interstellar Interaction from the Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX)

D. J. McComas; Fredric Allegrini; P. Bochsler; M. Bzowski; E. R. Christian; Geoffrey Crew; Robert DeMajistre; H. J. Fahr; Horst Fichtner; Priscilla C. Frisch; H. O. Funsten; S. A. Fuselier; G. Gloeckler; Mike Gruntman; J. Heerikhuisen; Vladislav V. Izmodenov; Paul Henry Janzen; P. Knappenberger; S. M. Krimigis; Harald Kucharek; M. A. Lee; G. Livadiotis; S. A. Livi; R. J. MacDowall; D. G. Mitchell; E. Möbius; T. E. Moore; Nikolai V. Pogorelov; Daniel B. Reisenfeld; Edmond C. Roelof

Whats Happening in the Heliosphere The influence of the Sun is felt well beyond the orbits of the planets. The solar wind is a stream of charged particles emanating from the Sun that carves a bubble in interstellar space known as the heliosphere and shrouds the entire solar system. The edge of the heliosphere, the region where the solar wind interacts with interstellar space, is largely unexplored. Voyager 1 and 2 crossed this boundary in 2004 and 2007, respectively, providing detailed but only localized information. In this issue (see the cover), McComas et al. (p. 959, published online 15 October), Fuselier et al. (p. 962, published online 15 October), Funsten et al. (p. 964, published online 15 October), and Möbius et al. (p. 969, published online 15 October) present data taken by NASAs Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX). Since early 2009, IBEX has been building all-sky maps of the emissions of energetic neutral atoms produced at the boundary between the heliosphere and the interstellar medium. These maps have unexpectedly revealed a narrow band of emission that bisects the two Voyager locations at energies ranging from 0.2 to 6 kiloelectron volts. Emissions from the band are two- to threefold brighter than outside the band, in contrast to current models that predict much smaller variations across the sky. By comparing the IBEX observations with models of the heliosphere, Schwadron et al. (p. 966, published online 15 October) show that to date no model fully explains the observations. The model they have developed suggests that the interstellar magnetic field plays a stronger role than previously thought. In addition to the all-sky maps, IBEX measured the signatures of H, He, and O flowing into the heliosphere from the interstellar medium. In a related report, Krimigis et al. (p. 971, published online 15 October) present an all-sky image of energetic neutral atoms with energies ranging between 6 and 13 kiloelectron volts obtained with the Ion and Neutral Camera onboard the Cassini spacecraft orbiting Saturn. It shows that parts of the structure observed by IBEX extend to high energies. These data indicate that the shape of the heliosphere is not consistent with that of a comet aligned in the direction of the Suns travel through the galaxy as was previously thought. Observations by the Interstellar Boundary Explorer have revealed surprising features in the interaction between the heliosphere and the interstellar medium. The Sun moves through the local interstellar medium, continuously emitting ionized, supersonic solar wind plasma and carving out a cavity in interstellar space called the heliosphere. The recently launched Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX) spacecraft has completed its first all-sky maps of the interstellar interaction at the edge of the heliosphere by imaging energetic neutral atoms (ENAs) emanating from this region. We found a bright ribbon of ENA emission, unpredicted by prior models or theories, that may be ordered by the local interstellar magnetic field interacting with the heliosphere. This ribbon is superposed on globally distributed flux variations ordered by both the solar wind structure and the direction of motion through the interstellar medium. Our results indicate that the external galactic environment strongly imprints the heliosphere.


Science | 2015

67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, a Jupiter family comet with a high D/H ratio

Kathrin Altwegg; H. Balsiger; Akiva Bar-Nun; Jean-Jacques Berthelier; André Bieler; P. Bochsler; Christelle Briois; Ursina Maria Calmonte; Michael R. Combi; J. De Keyser; P. Eberhardt; Björn Fiethe; S. A. Fuselier; Sébastien Gasc; Tamas I. Gombosi; Kenneth Calvin Hansen; Myrtha Hässig; Annette Jäckel; Ernest Kopp; A. Korth; L. Leroy; U. Mall; Bernard Marty; Olivier Mousis; Eddy Neefs; Tobias Owen; H. Rème; Martin Rubin; Thierry Sémon; Chia-Yu Tzou

The provenance of water and organic compounds on Earth and other terrestrial planets has been discussed for a long time without reaching a consensus. One of the best means to distinguish between different scenarios is by determining the deuterium-to-hydrogen (D/H) ratios in the reservoirs for comets and Earth’s oceans. Here, we report the direct in situ measurement of the D/H ratio in the Jupiter family comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko by the ROSINA mass spectrometer aboard the European Space Agency’s Rosetta spacecraft, which is found to be (5.3 ± 0.7) × 10−4—that is, approximately three times the terrestrial value. Previous cometary measurements and our new finding suggest a wide range of D/H ratios in the water within Jupiter family objects and preclude the idea that this reservoir is solely composed of Earth ocean–like water.


Solar Physics | 1998

First Solar EUV Irradiances Obtained from SOHO by the CELIAS/SEM

D. L. Judge; D. R. McMullin; H. S. Ogawa; D. Hovestadt; Berndt Klecker; Martin Hilchenbach; E. Möbius; L. R. Canfield; Robert E. Vest; R. Watts; Charles S. Tarrio; M. Kühne; Peter Wurz

The first results obtained with the Solar EUV Monitor (SEM), part of the Charge, Element, and Isotope Analysis System (CELIAS) instrument, aboard the SOlar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) satellite are presented. The instrument monitors the full-disk absolute value of the solar He II irradiance at 30.4 nm, and the full-disk absolute solar irradiance integrated between 0.1 nm and 77 nm. The SEM was first turned on December 15, 1995 and obtained ‘first light’ on December 16, 1995. At this time the SOHO spacecraft was close to the L-l Lagrange point, 1.5 x 106 km from the Earth towards the Sun. The data obtained by the SEM during the first four and a half months of operation will be presented. Although the period of observation is near solar minimum, the SEM data reveal strong short-term solar irradiance variations in the broad-band, central image channel, which includes solar X-ray emissions.


Science | 2015

Time variability and heterogeneity in the coma of 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko

Myrtha Hässig; Kathrin Altwegg; H. Balsiger; Akiva Bar-Nun; J. J. Berthelier; André Bieler; P. Bochsler; Christelle Briois; Ursina Maria Calmonte; Michael R. Combi; J. De Keyser; P. Eberhardt; Björn Fiethe; S. A. Fuselier; M. Galand; Sébastien Gasc; Tamas I. Gombosi; Kenneth Calvin Hansen; Annette Jäckel; H. U. Keller; Ernest Kopp; A. Korth; E. Kührt; Léna Le Roy; U. Mall; Bernard Marty; Olivier Mousis; Eddy Neefs; Tobias Owen; H. Rème

Comets contain the best-preserved material from the beginning of our planetary system. Their nuclei and comae composition reveal clues about physical and chemical conditions during the early solar system when comets formed. ROSINA (Rosetta Orbiter Spectrometer for Ion and Neutral Analysis) onboard the Rosetta spacecraft has measured the coma composition of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko with well-sampled time resolution per rotation. Measurements were made over many comet rotation periods and a wide range of latitudes. These measurements show large fluctuations in composition in a heterogeneous coma that has diurnal and possibly seasonal variations in the major outgassing species: water, carbon monoxide, and carbon dioxide. These results indicate a complex coma-nucleus relationship where seasonal variations may be driven by temperature differences just below the comet surface.


Nature | 2007

The loss of ions from Venus through the plasma wake

Sergey Vasilyevich Barabash; A. Fedorov; J. J. Sauvaud; R. Lundin; C. T. Russell; Yoshifumi Futaana; T. L. Zhang; H. Andersson; K. Brinkfeldt; Alexander Grigoriev; M. Holmström; M. Yamauchi; Kazushi Asamura; W. Baumjohann; H. Lammer; A. J. Coates; D. O. Kataria; D. R. Linder; C. C. Curtis; K. C. Hsieh; Bill R. Sandel; M. Grande; H. Gunell; H. Koskinen; E. Kallio; P. Riihela; T. Sales; W. Schmidt; Janet U. Kozyra; N. Krupp

Venus, unlike Earth, is an extremely dry planet although both began with similar masses, distances from the Sun, and presumably water inventories. The high deuterium-to-hydrogen ratio in the venusian atmosphere relative to Earth’s also indicates that the atmosphere has undergone significantly different evolution over the age of the Solar System. Present-day thermal escape is low for all atmospheric species. However, hydrogen can escape by means of collisions with hot atoms from ionospheric photochemistry, and although the bulk of O and O2 are gravitationally bound, heavy ions have been observed to escape through interaction with the solar wind. Nevertheless, their relative rates of escape, spatial distribution, and composition could not be determined from these previous measurements. Here we report Venus Express measurements showing that the dominant escaping ions are O+, He+ and H+. The escaping ions leave Venus through the plasma sheet (a central portion of the plasma wake) and in a boundary layer of the induced magnetosphere. The escape rate ratios are Q(H+)/Q(O+) = 1.9; Q(He+)/Q(O+) = 0.07. The first of these implies that the escape of H+ and O+, together with the estimated escape of neutral hydrogen and oxygen, currently takes place near the stoichometric ratio corresponding to water.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2012

INTERSTELLAR GAS FLOW PARAMETERS DERIVED FROM INTERSTELLAR BOUNDARY EXPLORER-Lo OBSERVATIONS IN 2009 AND 2010: ANALYTICAL ANALYSIS

E. Möbius; Peter Bochsler; M. Bzowski; D. Heirtzler; M. A. Kubiak; Harald Kucharek; M. A. Lee; T. Leonard; N. A. Schwadron; X. Wu; S. A. Fuselier; Geoffrey Crew; D. J. McComas; L. Petersen; Lukas A. Saul; D. Valovcin; R. Vanderspek; Peter Wurz

Neutral atom imaging of the interstellar gas flow in the inner heliosphere provides the most detailed information on physical conditions of the surrounding interstellar medium (ISM) and its interaction with the heliosphere. The Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX) measured neutral H, He, O, and Ne for three years. We compare the He and combined O + Ne flow distributions for two interstellar flow passages in 2009 and 2010 with an analytical calculation, which is simplified because the IBEX orientation provides observations at almost exactly the perihelion of the gas trajectories. This method allows separate determination of the key ISM parameters: inflow speed, longitude, and latitude, as well as temperature. A combined optimization, as in complementary approaches, is thus not necessary. Based on the observed peak position and width in longitude and latitude, inflow speed, latitude, and temperature are found as a function of inflow longitude. The latter is then constrained by the variation of the observed flow latitude as a function of observer longitude and by the ratio of the widths of the distribution in longitude and latitude. Identical results are found for 2009 and 2010: an He flow vector somewhat outside previous determinations (λISM∞ = 79. ◦ 0+3 . 0(−3. ◦ 5), βISM∞ =− 4. 9 ± 0. 2, VISM∞ = 23.5 + 3.0(−2.0) km s −1 , THe = 5000–8200 K), suggesting a larger inflow longitude and lower speed. The O + Ne temperature range, T O+N e = 5300–9000 K, is found to be close to the upper range for He and consistent with an isothermal medium for all species within current uncertainties.


Science | 2009

Width and Variation of the ENA Flux Ribbon Observed by the Interstellar Boundary Explorer

S. A. Fuselier; F. Allegrini; H. O. Funsten; A. G. Ghielmetti; D. Heirtzler; Harald Kucharek; O. W. Lennartsson; D. J. McComas; E. Möbius; T. E. Moore; S. M. Petrinec; Lukas A. Saul; Jürgen Scheer; N. A. Schwadron; Peter Wurz

Whats Happening in the Heliosphere The influence of the Sun is felt well beyond the orbits of the planets. The solar wind is a stream of charged particles emanating from the Sun that carves a bubble in interstellar space known as the heliosphere and shrouds the entire solar system. The edge of the heliosphere, the region where the solar wind interacts with interstellar space, is largely unexplored. Voyager 1 and 2 crossed this boundary in 2004 and 2007, respectively, providing detailed but only localized information. In this issue (see the cover), McComas et al. (p. 959, published online 15 October), Fuselier et al. (p. 962, published online 15 October), Funsten et al. (p. 964, published online 15 October), and Möbius et al. (p. 969, published online 15 October) present data taken by NASAs Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX). Since early 2009, IBEX has been building all-sky maps of the emissions of energetic neutral atoms produced at the boundary between the heliosphere and the interstellar medium. These maps have unexpectedly revealed a narrow band of emission that bisects the two Voyager locations at energies ranging from 0.2 to 6 kiloelectron volts. Emissions from the band are two- to threefold brighter than outside the band, in contrast to current models that predict much smaller variations across the sky. By comparing the IBEX observations with models of the heliosphere, Schwadron et al. (p. 966, published online 15 October) show that to date no model fully explains the observations. The model they have developed suggests that the interstellar magnetic field plays a stronger role than previously thought. In addition to the all-sky maps, IBEX measured the signatures of H, He, and O flowing into the heliosphere from the interstellar medium. In a related report, Krimigis et al. (p. 971, published online 15 October) present an all-sky image of energetic neutral atoms with energies ranging between 6 and 13 kiloelectron volts obtained with the Ion and Neutral Camera onboard the Cassini spacecraft orbiting Saturn. It shows that parts of the structure observed by IBEX extend to high energies. These data indicate that the shape of the heliosphere is not consistent with that of a comet aligned in the direction of the Suns travel through the galaxy as was previously thought. Observations by the Interstellar Boundary Explorer have revealed surprising features in the interaction between the heliosphere and the interstellar medium. The dominant feature in Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX) sky maps of heliospheric energetic neutral atom (ENA) flux is a ribbon of enhanced flux that extends over a broad range of ecliptic latitudes and longitudes. It is narrow (~20° average width) but long (extending over 300° in the sky) and is observed at energies from 0.2 to 6 kilo–electron volts. We demonstrate that the flux in the ribbon is a factor of 2 to 3 times higher than that of the more diffuse, globally distributed heliospheric ENA flux. The ribbon is most pronounced at ~1 kilo–electron volt. The average width of the ribbon is nearly constant, independent of energy. The ribbon is likely the result of an enhancement in the combined solar wind and pickup ion populations in the heliosheath.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2011

Strong influence of lunar crustal fields on the solar wind flow

Charles Lue; Yoshifumi Futaana; Stas Barabash; Martin Wieser; Mats Holmström; Anil Bhardwaj; M. B. Dhanya; Peter Wurz

We discuss the influence of lunar magnetic anomalies on the solar wind and on the lunar surface, based on maps of solar wind proton fluxes deflected by the magnetic anomalies. The maps are produced ...


Nature | 2008

Energetic neutral atoms as the explanation for the high-velocity hydrogen around HD 209458b

Mats Holmström; Andreas Ekenbäck; Franck Selsis; Thomas Penz; Helmut Lammer; Peter Wurz

Absorption in the stellar Lyman-α (Lyα) line observed during the transit of the extrasolar planet HD 209458b in front of its host star reveals high-velocity atomic hydrogen at great distances from the planet. This has been interpreted as hydrogen atoms escaping from the planet’s exosphere, possibly undergoing hydrodynamic blow-off, and being accelerated by stellar radiation pressure. Energetic neutral atoms around Solar System planets have been observed to form from charge exchange between solar wind protons and neutral hydrogen from the planetary exospheres, however, and this process also should occur around extrasolar planets. Here we show that the measured transit-associated Lyα absorption can be explained by the interaction between the exosphere of HD 209458b and the stellar wind, and that radiation pressure alone cannot explain the observations. As the stellar wind protons are the source of the observed energetic neutral atoms, this provides a way of probing stellar wind conditions, and our model suggests a slow and hot stellar wind near HD 209458b at the time of the observations.


Space Science Reviews | 2000

THE LOW-ENERGY NEUTRAL ATOM IMAGER FOR IMAGE

T. E. Moore; Dennis J. Chornay; M. R. Collier; F. A. Herrero; J. Johnson; M. A. Johnson; John W. Keller; J. F. Laudadio; J. Lobell; K. W. Ogilvie; P. Rozmarynowski; S. A. Fuselier; A. G. Ghielmetti; E. Hertzberg; Douglas C. Hamilton; R. Lundgren; P. Wilson; P. Walpole; T. M. Stephen; B. L. Peko; B. Van Zyl; Peter Wurz; J. M. Quinn; G. R. Wilson

The ‘Imager for Magnetosphere-to-Aurora Global Exploration’ (IMAGE) will be launched early in the year 2000. It will be the first mission dedicated to imaging, with the capability to determine how the magnetosphere changes globally in response to solar storm effects in the solar wind, on time scales as short as a few minutes. The low energy neutral atom (LENA) imager uses a new atom-to-negative ion surface conversion technology to image the neutral atom flux and measure its composition (H and O) and energy distribution (10 to 750 eV). LENA uses electrostatic optics techniques for energy (per charge) discrimination and carbon foil time-of-flight techniques for mass discrimination. It has a 90° x 8° field-of-view in 12 pixels, each nominally 8° x 8°. Spacecraft spin provides a total field-of-view of 90° x 360°, comprised of 12 x 45 pixels. LENA is designed to image fast neutral atom fluxes in its energy range, emitted by auroral ionospheres or the sun, or penetrating from the interstellar medium. It will thereby determine how superthermal plasma heating is distributed in space, how and why it varies on short time scales, and how this heating is driven by solar activity as reflected in solar wind conditions.

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S. A. Fuselier

University of Texas at San Antonio

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Martin Wieser

Swedish Institute of Space Physics

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Yoshifumi Futaana

Swedish Institute of Space Physics

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Stas Barabash

Swedish Institute of Space Physics

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E. Möbius

University of New Hampshire

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Mats Holmström

Swedish Institute of Space Physics

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Kazushi Asamura

Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency

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