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      Solar Wind at 33 AU: Setting Bounds on the Pluto Interaction for New Horizons

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          Abstract

          The NASA New Horizons spacecraft flies past Pluto on July 14, 2015, carrying two instruments that detect charged particles. Pluto has a tenuous, extended atmosphere that is escaping the weak gravity of the planet. The interaction of the solar wind with the escaping atmosphere of Pluto depends on solar wind conditions as well as the vertical structure of the atmosphere. We have analyzed Voyager 2 particles and fields measurements between 25 and 39 AU and present their statistical variations. We have adjusted these predictions to allow for the declining activity of the Sun and solar wind output. We summarize the range of SW conditions that can be expected at 33 AU and survey the range of scales of interaction that New Horizons might experience. Model estimates for the solar wind stand-off distance vary from approximately 7 to 1000 RP with our best estimate being around 40 RP (where we take the radius of Pluto to be RP=1184 km).

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          Pluto's atmosphere

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            Solar wind stagnation near comets

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              Analytic exosphere models for geocoronal applications

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                15 September 2015
                Article
                10.1002/2015JE004880
                1509.04660
                9a37b99a-966f-427f-89b5-d0ee405b42bf

                http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

                History
                Custom metadata
                29 pages, 9 Figures. Submitted version accepted by JGR for publication August 2015
                astro-ph.EP

                Planetary astrophysics
                Planetary astrophysics

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