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Observations of Mercury's Exosphere: Composition and StructureMercury is surrounded by a tenuous exosphere in which particles travel on ballistic trajectories under the influence of a combination of gravity and solar radiation pressure. The densities are so small that the surface forms the exobase and particles in the exosphere are more likely to collide with it rather than with each other. For a planet with a more substantial collision­-dominated atmosphere, a population of particles that enters from below the exobase supplies the exosphere. In contrast Mercury's exosphere is supplied both by incoming sources including the solar wind (hydrogen and helium), micrometeoroids (dust), meteoroids and cornets, and by particles released from the surface through a variety of processes that include sputtering by solar wind ions, desorption by solar photons and electrons, impacts by micrometeoroids, and thermal desorption of surface materials. These source processes are balanced by loss processes, which include impact with and sticking to the surface, Jeans (or thermal) escape, ionization followed by trans­port along magnetic field lines, and acceleration by solar radia­tion pressure to escape velocity. Ground-based attempts to detect an atmosphere around Mercury before Mariner 10 first visited the planet in 1974 were unsuccessful and led only to increasingly tight upper limits, culminating in a limiting value for surface atmospheric pressure of 0.015 Pascal (Pa) determined by Fink et al. (1974).
Document ID
20190025908
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Book Chapter
Authors
McClintock, William E.
(Colorado Univ. Boulder, CO, United States)
Cassidy, Timothy A.
(Colorado Univ. Boulder, CO, United States)
Merkel, Aimee W.
(Colorado Univ. Boulder, CO, United States)
Killen, Rosemary M.
(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, MD, United States)
Burger, Matthew H.
(Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) Baltimore, MD, United States)
Vervack, Ronald J., Jr.
(Johns Hopkins Univ. Baltimore, MD, United States)
Date Acquired
June 12, 2019
Publication Date
December 1, 2018
Publication Information
Publication: Mercury: The View After MESSENGER
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
e-ISBN: 9781316650684
Subject Category
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration
Report/Patent Number
GSFC-E-DAA-TN66712
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: SPEC5732
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNG16WA70C
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAS5-03127
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Use by or on behalf of the US Gov. Permitted.
Technical Review
Single Expert
Keywords
Solar
Mercury
Exosphere
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