Mémoire
Mouton, Alyssa
Promoteur(s) :
Bonfond, Bertrand
Date de soutenance : 3-sep-2025/5-sep-2025 • URL permanente : http://hdl.handle.net/2268.2/23876
Détails
| Titre : | Mémoire |
| Auteur : | Mouton, Alyssa
|
| Date de soutenance : | 3-sep-2025/5-sep-2025 |
| Promoteur(s) : | Bonfond, Bertrand
|
| Membre(s) du jury : | Grodent, Denis
De Becker, Michaël
Orban De Xivry, Gilles
|
| Langue : | Anglais |
| Discipline(s) : | Physique, chimie, mathématiques & sciences de la terre > Aérospatiale, astronomie & astrophysique |
| Institution(s) : | Université de Liège, Liège, Belgique |
| Diplôme : | Master en sciences spatiales, à finalité approfondie |
| Faculté : | Mémoires de la Faculté des Sciences |
Résumé
[en] This thesis presents a statistical study of auroral signatures associated with particle
injections at Jupiter. Auroral injections are events where populations of energetic
particles are rapidly accelerated and injected into Jupiter’s magnetosphere. The
signature of these injections manifest as compact auroral structures, reflecting lo
calized increases in high-energy particle populations that move azimuthally around
the planet, guided by magnetic field gradients and curvature. They can exhibit a
longitudinal shift between the brightness peak and the color ratio peak. This shift is
defined as negative when higher-energy particles begin their differential drift relative
to lower-energy particles, producing an offset downstream in the direction of plasma
rotation around the planet. In her thesis, Dumont (2023) reported a surprisingly
high number of positive shifts that were difficult to explain physically; these results
were likely influenced by limitations in the auroral image reconstruction technique.
In this thesis, an improved map reconstruction method is developped, specifically
designed to reduce such artifacts, providing a more accurate representation of par
ticle injections and their associated shifts.
Using ultraviolet spectral data collected by the Ultraviolet Spectrograph (UVS)
instrument aboard the Juno spacecraft, a comprehensive analysis was performed on
693 injection events to characterize the spatial and temporal relationships between
auroral features. Auroral injections are mapped to Jupiter’s equatorial plane using
the JRM33magnetic field model. For each event, intensity profiles of both brightness
and color ratio are extracted along arcs crossing the injection coordinates. The
intensities are measured on brightness and color ratio maps, reconstructed from
successive observation ribbons acquired by Juno. Light curves are then constructed,
and the longitudinal shift between the brightness and color ratio peaks is measured.
A statistical analysis of these shifts, as well as of event occurrence, is performed as
a function of longitude, local time, radial distance, and hemisphere.
The analysis reveals clear hemispheric asymmetries in Jupiter’s auroral dynamics.
Small-scale structures dominate overall. In the Northern Hemisphere, fewer struc
tures are detected between 135°–180° longitude. In the Southern Hemisphere, struc
ture occurrences increase between 12:00 and 03:00 LT, whereas in the north this
increase occurs later. Positive longitudinal shifts between brightness and color ratio
peaks are rare, in contrast with earlier studies. Observed negative and no-shifts are
consistent with energy-dependent particle dynamics: populations remain together
for no-shifts, while higher-energy particles start drifting for negative shifts. These
results suggest that previous reports of frequent positive shifts were influenced by
methodological biases, and they highlight the combined role of magnetic field asym
metries and dynamic plasma processes in shaping auroral variability
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