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Interaction of the solar wind with the moon.During its orbit about the earth, the moon is located in the interplanetary medium or in the geomagnetosheath-geomagnetotail formed by the solar wind interaction with earth. In the tail, no evidence is found for a lunar magnetic field. In the interplanetary medium, no evidence exists for a bow shock or a trailing shock, although a well defined plasma wake region is observed in the anti-solar wind direction. The moon absorbs the solar wind plasma that strikes its surface and creates a void region or cavity in the flow. The observed lunar Mach cone gives evidence for the anisotropic propagation of waves in the magnetized collisionless warm plasma of the solar wind. The transmission of microstructural discontinuities in the interplanetary medium past the moon shows little distortion, indicating a low effective electrical conductivity of the lunar body. Fluctuations of the interplanetary magnetic field upstream from the plasma wake are stimulated by the disturbed conditions in that region. The moon behaves like a cold, nonmagnetic, fully absorbing dielectric sphere in the solar wind flow.
Document ID
19720036359
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Proceedings
Authors
Ness, N. F.
(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, Md., United States)
Date Acquired
August 6, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1972
Subject Category
Space Radiation
Meeting Information
Meeting: Solar-terrestrial physics/1970
Location: Leningrad
Country: Soviet Union
Start Date: May 11, 1970
End Date: May 13, 1970
Accession Number
72A20025
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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