SM24A-04
A Survey of Cassini CAPS Ion Observations During Titan Flybys TA-T83

Tuesday, 15 December 2015: 16:45
2009 (Moscone West)
Adam K Woodson, University of Colorado, Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Research, Boulder, CO, United States, Robert E Johnson, Univ Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, United States, Howard Todd Smith, Applied Physics Laboratory Johns Hopkins, Laurel, MD, United States and Frank J Crary, University of Colorado at Boulder, Boulder, CO, United States
Abstract:
The Cassini Plasma Spectrometer (CAPS) sampled Titan's plasma environment during each of 83 encounters with the moon between orbit insertion on June 30, 2004 and June 1, 2012. The CAPS Ion Mass Spectrometer (IMS) acquired energy- and mass-per-charge-discriminated time-of-flight (TOF) spectra associated with ionospheric H+, H2+, H3+, CHx+, and C2Hx+ during at least 68 of those encounters. Herein we discuss ion energy distributions extracted from these spectra, each accumulated over an ~4 minute interval along the spacecraft trajectory. This is accomplished by fitting calibration peak models to TOF spectra in order to determine the TOF range associated with each aforementioned ion group, and then summing counts over each TOF range to obtain well-resolved energy peaks for each group. Energy distributions are determined by fitting the logistic power peak function to each of the resulting energy spectra. We then plot the resulting distribution parameters (peak energy, peak amplitude, and peak width or temperature) for each species and each encounter against Titan latitude, longitude, and altitude to generate a map of ion parameters. In addition, the encounters are grouped according to ambient plasma and magnetic field measurements in order to characterize the ion distribution parameters in different regions of Saturn's magnetosphere.