Publication | Closed Access
Planetary Radio Astronomy Observations from Voyager 1 Near Saturn
225
Citations
11
References
1981
Year
Saturn Electrostatic DischargeEngineeringOuter PlanetSaturn Kilometric RadiationPlanetary RingPlanetary ExplorationVoyager 1Near SaturnRadiometryRadio TelescopeRadio ScienceAstrophysics
The Voyager 1 planetary radio astronomy experiment detected two distinct kinds of radio emissions from Saturn. The first, Saturn kilometric radiation, is strongly polarized, bursty, tightly correlated with Saturn's rotation, and exhibits complex dynamic spectral features somewhat reminiscent of those in Jupiter's radio emission. It appears in radio frequencies below about 1.2 megahertz. The second kind of radio emission, Saturn electrostatic discharge, is unpolarized, extremely impulsive, loosely correlated with Saturn's rotation, and very broadband, appearing throughout the observing range of the experiment (20.4 kilohertz to 40.2 megahertz). Its sources appear to lie in the planetary rings.
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