A physical model for the magnetosphere of Uranus at solstice time
Filippo Pantellini

TL;DR
This paper presents a magnetohydrodynamic model describing the unique, tornado-shaped magnetic tail of Uranus at solstice, highlighting the vortical motion and evolution of magnetic field lines in its magnetosphere.
Contribution
It introduces a novel physical model for Uranus's magnetosphere, emphasizing the vortex structure and the evolution of magnetic field lines at solstice.
Findings
Magnetic tail forms a tornado-shaped vortex with two foot points.
Magnetic field lines follow a vortical motion converging to a double helix.
The model explains the unique tail structure of Uranus at solstice.
Abstract
Uranus is the only planet in the Solar System whose rotation axis and orbital plane are nearly parallel to each other. Uranus is also the planet with the largest angle between the rotation axis and the direction of its magnetic dipole (roughly ). Consequently, the shape and structure of its magnetospheric tail is very different to those of all other planets in whichever season one may consider. We propose a magnetohydrodynamic model for the magnetic tail of Uranus at solstice time. One of the main conclusions of the model is that all magnetic field lines forming the extended magnetic tail follow the same qualitative evolution from the time of their emergence through the planet's surface and the time of their late evolution after having been stretched and twisted several times downstream of the planet. In the planetary frame, these field lines move on magnetic surfaces that…
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