16 Years of Ulysses Interstellar Dust Measurements in the Solar System: I. Mass Distribution and Gas-to-Dust Mass Ratio
Harald Kr\"uger, Peter Strub, Eberhard Gruen, Veerle J. Sterken

TL;DR
This study analyzes 16 years of Ulysses spacecraft data to determine the mass distribution of interstellar dust and the gas-to-dust ratio in the local interstellar medium, confirming the presence of large grains and refining density estimates.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of the entire Ulysses interstellar dust dataset, updating the gas-to-dust ratio and dust density with improved parameters and methods.
Findings
Gas-to-dust-mass ratio of 193 with uncertainties
Detection of 1 micron-sized large interstellar grains
Dust density lower by a factor of three compared to earlier estimates
Abstract
In the early 1990s, contemporary interstellar dust (ISD) penetrating deep into the heliosphere was identified with the in-situ dust detector on board the Ulysses spacecraft. Between 1992 and the end of 2007 Ulysses monitored the ISD stream. The interstellar grains act as tracers of the physical conditions in the local interstellar medium surrounding our solar system. Earlier analyses of the Ulysses ISD data measured between 1992 and 1998 implied the existence of 'big' ISD grains [up to 10^-13kg]. The derived gas-to-dust-mass ratio was smaller than the one derived from astronomical observations, implying a concentration of ISD in the very local interstellar medium. We analyse the entire data set from 16 yr of Ulysses ISD measurements in interplanetary space. This paper concentrates on the overall mass distribution of ISD. An accompanying paper investigates time-variable phenomena in the…
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