Emission and propagation of Saturn kilometric radiation: magneto-ionic modes, beaming pattern and polarization state
L. Lamy, B. Cecconi, P. Zarka, P. Canu, P. Schippers, W. S. Kurth, R., L. Mutel, D. A. Gurnett, J. D. Menietti, P. Louarn

TL;DR
This study analyzes Saturn kilometric radiation using Cassini data, revealing emission modes, source locations, beaming patterns, and polarization states, enhancing understanding of planetary radio emissions and magneto-ionic wave propagation.
Contribution
It provides detailed measurements of SKR emission modes, source regions, beaming angles, and polarization evolution, applying magneto-ionic theory to planetary radio wave propagation.
Findings
SKR includes broadband X and narrowband O modes.
Sources emit just above the X mode cutoff in hot plasma.
Beaming pattern is a hollow cone with frequency-dependent aperture.
Abstract
The Cassini mission crossed the source region of the Saturn kilometric radiation (SKR) on 17 October 2008. On this occasion, the Radio and Plasma Wave Science (RPWS) experiment detected both local and distant radio sources, while plasma parameters were measured in situ by the magnetometer (MAG) and the Cassini Plasma Spectrometer (CAPS). A goniopolarimetric inversion was applied to RPWS 3-antenna electric measurements to determine the wave vector k and the complete state of polarization of detected waves. We identify broadband extraordinary (X) as well as narrowband ordinary (O) mode SKR at low frequencies. Within the source region, SKR is emitted just above the X mode cutoff frequency in a hot plasma, with a typical electron-to-wave energy conversion efficiency of 1% (2% peak). The knowledge of the k-vector is then used to derive the locus of SKR sources in the kronian magnetosphere,…
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