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AGU: Geophysical Research Letters

 

Index Terms

  • Planetology: Comets and Small Bodies: Interactions with solar wind plasma and fields
  • Radio Science: Radio astronomy
  • Space Plasma Physics: Discontinuities
  • Space Plasma Physics: Turbulence

Abstract

GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, VOL. 13, NO. 4, PP. 407-410, 1986
doi:10.1029/GL013i004p00407

Broadening and occultation of radio sources by comet Giacobini‐Zinner as observed from ICE

J. L. Steinberg

Observatoire de Paris, Département de Recherche Spatiale, Unité Associée au CNRS No264

J. Fainberg

Laboratory for Extraterrestrial Physics, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center

N. Meyer‐Vernet

Observatoire de Paris, Département de Recherche Spatiale, Unité Associée au CNRS No264

S. Hoang

Observatoire de Paris, Département de Recherche Spatiale, Unité Associée au CNRS No264

During the encounter of the International Cometary Explorer (ICE) with comet P/Giacobini‐Zinner, the radio astronomy experiment observed occultation and propagation effects on several distant radio sources. The observations of the partial occultation of the galactic radio source between 360 and 1000 kHz show that the 3‐dimensional large scale structure of the coma is consistent with the structure determined from in‐situ measurements made along the encounter trajectory. In addition, these observations remove a previously existing ambiguity in the position of the galactic source. Between 110 and 360 kHz the Earth source is broadened by scattering by the comet random density inhomogeneities. The amount of broadening indicates that the electron density fluctuations measured in situ by ICE along its trajectory (100% fluctuations with a scale length of 1 to 2 10³ km over a path length of 105 km) exist with the same properties in the perpendicular direction.

Received 17 February 1986; accepted 6 March 1986; .

Citation: Steinberg, J. L., J. Fainberg, N. Meyer‐Vernet, and S. Hoang (1986), Broadening and occultation of radio sources by comet Giacobini‐Zinner as observed from ICE, Geophys. Res. Lett., 13(4), 407–410, doi:10.1029/GL013i004p00407.

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