Cassini sheds new light on the physics of planetary radiation belts

Research report (imported) 2021 - Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research

Authors
Roussos, Elias; Krupp, Norbert; Christensen, Ulrich
Departments
Abteilung Planetenwissenschaften
Summary
Planetary radiation belts are those regions near a planet where the intrinsic magnetic field is strong enough to trap energetic charged particles like electrons and protons. In the past processes in the radiation belts of the Earth were thought to be the benchmark for all the other planetary radiation belts in the solar system. However, recently measurements onboard the Cassini spacecraft in the Kronian system have shown that Saturn’s belts are very different compared to Earth. A particle detector built at the MPI for Solar System research (MPS) even discovered a new, formerly unknown belt.

For the full text, see the German version.

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