WHISTLER-MODE WAVES IN THE JOVIAN
MAGNETOSHEATH
LIN NG
KELLOGG PJ
THIESSEN JP
LENGYELFREY D
TSURUTANI BT
PHILLIPS JL
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-SPACE PHYSICS
v.99, n.A12, DEC 1, 94, p.23527-23539
During the Ulysses flyby of Jupiter in February 1992, the spacecraft
traversed the Jovian
magnetosheath for a few hours during the inbound pass and for a few days
during the outbound
pass. Burstlike electromagnetic waves at frequencies of similar to 0.1-0.4 of
the local electron
cyclotron frequency have been observed by the Unified Radio and Plasma Wave
(URAP)
experiment. The waves were more often observed in the regions which were
probably the
outer or middle magnetosheath, especially near the bow shock, and rarely seen
in the
magnetosphere/magnetosheath boundary layer. The propagation angles of the
waves are
estimated-by comparing the measurements of the wave electric and magnetic
fields in the
spacecraft spin plane with the corresponding values calculated using the cold
plasma
dispersion relation under local field and plasma conditions. It is found that
the waves
propagate obliquely with wave angles between similar to 3 0 degrees and 50
degrees. These
waves are likely to be the whistler mode waves which are excited by
suprathermal electrons
with a few hundred eV and a slight anisotropy (T-perpendicular to/T-parallel
to similar to
1.1-1.5). They are probably similar in nature to the lion roars observed in
the Earth's
magnetosheath. Signature of coupling between the mirror mode and the whistler
mode have
also been observed. The plasma conditions which favor the excitation of the
whistler mode
instability during the wave events exist as observed by the plasma experiment
of Ulysses.