Solar Wind a Major Driver of Atmospheric Sodium at Mercury by Morgan Rehnberg for Eos news Washington DC (SPX) May 31, 2022
No object in the solar system experiences the Sun's solar wind more powerfully than Mercury. The planet's magnetic field deflects the Sun's stream of electrically charged particles at a distance of only 1,000 kilometers from Mercury's surface, a point called the magnetopause. The Sun's magnetic field lines are carried by the solar wind and bend as they collide with those of Mercury. When conditions are right, these bent lines break and meet with those of Mercury in an event called magnetic reconnection. During reconnection, particles from the solar wind can penetrate Mercury's magnetic field. These particle transmissions are called flux transfer events (FTEs), and a burst of FTEs in rapid succession is known as an FTE shower. Sun et al. investigate the effect of these showers on the planet's surface using data collected by NASA's MESSENGER (Mercury Surface, Space Environment, Geochemistry, and Ranging) spacecraft, which orbited Mercury between 2011 and 2015. As the spacecraft passed through Mercury's magnetopause and toward the surface, the onboard ion mass spectrometer, FIPS (Fast Imaging Plasma Spectrometer), recorded the local abundances of sodium group ions, including sodium, magnesium, aluminum, and silicon ions. Simultaneously, an onboard magnetometer measured the local magnetic environment. During the course of MESSENGER's orbital mission, this scenario occurred 3,748 times, and half included the observation of an FTE shower. The authors perform a statistical analysis of the abundance of sodium group ions in Mercury's atmosphere. During approaches coincident with an FTE shower, they find that the abundance of sodium group ions in the atmosphere is about 50% higher during non-FTE shower periods. After examining several potential mechanisms for this enhancement, the scientists conclude that sputtering from the solar wind is the most likely cause. These MESSENGER observations are an important indicator of the dynamism of Mercury's thin atmosphere, according to the authors. In addition, more information is likely to come in early 2026 when the joint European-Japanese mission BepiColombo arrives at Mercury. The mission consists of two spacecraft, one targeted at Mercury and one targeted at its magnetosphere. Working in concert, they should provide unprecedented detail on FTE-induced solar wind sputtering.
Space dust, asteroids and comets can account for all water on Mercury Leiden, Netherlands (SPX) Apr 22, 2022 Mercury harbors water ice in the shadows of the steepest craters around its poles. But it is unclear how those water molecules ended up on Mercury. Now a new simulation shows that incoming minor bodies such as asteroids, comets and dust particles carry enough water to account for all the ice sheets present. The study could form the basis for new research on water in exoplanetary systems. Publication in Icarus on April 19th. We have known for a few decades that Mercury harbors water. You might expe ... read more
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