Imaging Jupiter's radiation belts down to 127 MHz with LOFAR
J. N. Girard, P. Zarka, C. Tasse, S. Hess, I. de Pater, D., Santos-Costa, Q. Nenon, A. Sicard, S. Bourdarie, J. Anderson, A. Asgekar, M., E. Bell, I. van Bemmel, M. J. Bentum, G. Bernardi, P. Best, A. Bonafede, F., Breitling, R. P. Breton, J. W. Broderick, W. N. Brouw

TL;DR
This study presents the first low-frequency, resolved images of Jupiter's radiation belts at 127 MHz using LOFAR, revealing an extended emission region and providing new insights into electron distribution and magnetospheric dynamics.
Contribution
The paper provides the first resolved low-frequency images of Jupiter's radiation belts, extending the known emission region and analyzing electron distribution with LOFAR at 127 MHz.
Findings
Extended emission up to 4-5 planetary radii observed.
Asymmetry and hot spots in emission peaks identified.
Spectral flux density lower than previous measurements.
Abstract
Context. Observing Jupiter's synchrotron emission from the Earth remains today the sole method to scrutinize the distribution and dynamical behavior of the ultra energetic electrons magnetically trapped around the planet (because in-situ particle data are limited in the inner magnetosphere). Aims. We perform the first resolved and low-frequency imaging of the synchrotron emission with LOFAR at 127 MHz. The radiation comes from low energy electrons (~1-30 MeV) which map a broad region of Jupiter's inner magnetosphere. Methods (see article for complete abstract) Results. The first resolved images of Jupiter's radiation belts at 127-172 MHz are obtained along with total integrated flux densities. They are compared with previous observations at higher frequencies and show a larger extent of the synchrotron emission source (>=4 ). The asymmetry and the dynamic of east-west emission…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
