X-rays from Saturn: A study with XMM-Newton and Chandra over the years 2002-05
G. Branduardi-Raymont (Mullard Space Science Laboratory, University, College London, UK), A. Bhardwaj (Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre, Trivandrum,, India), R. F. Elsner (NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, AL,, USA), P. Rodriguez (XMM-Newton SOC, Villafranca, Madrid

TL;DR
This study analyzes X-ray emissions from Saturn over several years using XMM-Newton and Chandra data, revealing a decrease in disk X-ray flux correlating with solar activity and identifying a fluorescent oxygen line from rings.
Contribution
First comprehensive multi-epoch spectral analysis of Saturn's X-ray emission, distinguishing disk and ring contributions and their evolution over time.
Findings
Disk X-ray emission decreases with solar activity.
Oxygen fluorescent line from rings remains relatively constant.
No detectable X-ray aurorae on Saturn.
Abstract
We present the results of the two most recent (2005) XMM-Newton observations of Saturn together with the re-analysis of an earlier (2002) observation from the XMM-Newton archive and of three Chandra observations in 2003 and 2004. While the XMM-Newton telescope resolution does not enable us to resolve spatially the contributions of the planet's disk and rings to the X-ray flux, we can estimate their strengths and their evolution over the years from spectral analysis, and compare them with those observed with Chandra. The spectrum of the X-ray emission is well fitted by an optically thin coronal model with an average temperature of 0.5 keV. The addition of a fluorescent oxygen emission line at ~0.53 keV improves the fits significantly. In accordance with earlier reports, we interpret the coronal component as emission from the planetary disk, produced by the scattering of solar X-rays in…
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