Galileo dust data from the jovian system: 2000 to 2003
Harald Kr\"uger, D. Bindschadler, S. F. Dermott, A. L. Graps, E., Gruen, B. A. Gustafson, D. P. Hamilton, M. S. Hanner, M. Horanyi, J. Kissel,, D. Linkert, G. Linkert, I. Mann, J. A. M. McDonnell, R. Moissl, G. E., Morfill, C. Polanskey, M. Roy, G. Schwehm, R. Srama

TL;DR
This paper presents detailed dust particle measurements from the Galileo spacecraft around Jupiter from 2000 to 2003, revealing high variability in dust flux, correlations with Io's activity, and insights into the Jovian dust environment and rings.
Contribution
It provides the first extensive in-situ dust data from Jupiter's system, including variability analysis and comparison with optical ring observations.
Findings
High dust impact rates, often exceeding 10 min^-1.
Correlation between dust flux peaks and Io torus activity.
Detection of large micron-sized particles in the outer magnetosphere.
Abstract
The Galileo spacecraft was orbiting Jupiter between Dec 1995 and Sep 2003. The Galileo dust detector monitored the jovian dust environment between about 2 and 370 R_J (jovian radius R_J = 71492 km). We present data from the Galileo dust instrument for the period January 2000 to September 2003. We report on the data of 5389 particles measured between 2000 and the end of the mission in 2003. The majority of the 21250 particles for which the full set of measured impact parameters (impact time, impact direction, charge rise times, charge amplitudes, etc.) was transmitted to Earth were tiny grains (about 10 nm in radius), most of them originating from Jupiter's innermost Galilean moon Io. Their impact rates frequently exceeded 10 min^-1. Surprisingly large impact rates up to 100 min^-1 occurred in Aug/Sep 2000 when Galileo was at about 280 R_J from Jupiter. This peak in dust emission appears…
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