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Magnetic evidence for an extended hydrogen exosphere at Mercury
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  • Daniel Schmid,
  • Helmut Lammer,
  • Ferdinand Plaschke,
  • Audrey Vorburger,
  • Nikolay Erkaev,
  • Peter Wurz,
  • Yasuhito Narita,
  • Martin Volwerk,
  • Wolfgang Baumjohann,
  • Brian J. Anderson
Daniel Schmid
Space Research Institute Graz (IWF), Austrian Academy of Sciences (OeAW)

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Helmut Lammer
Space Research Inst., Austrian Acad. Sciences
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Ferdinand Plaschke
IGEP, Technische Universität Braunschweig
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Audrey Vorburger
University of Bern
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Nikolay Erkaev
Institute of Computational Modeling
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Peter Wurz
University of Bern
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Yasuhito Narita
Space Research Institute, Austrian Academy of Sciences
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Martin Volwerk
Space Research Institute, OEAW
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Wolfgang Baumjohann
Space Research Institute
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Brian J. Anderson
John Hopkins Univ.
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Abstract

Remote observations by the Mariner10 and MESSENGER spacecraft have shown the existence of hydrogen in the exosphere of Mercury. However, to date the hydrogen number densities could only be estimated indirectly from exospheric models, based on the remotely observed Lyman-alpha radiances for atomic hydrogen (H), and the detection threshold of the Mariner10 occultation experiment for molecular hydrogen (H_2). Here we show the first on-site determined altitude-density profile of atomic H, derived from in-situ magnetic field observations by MESSENGER. The results reveal an extended H exosphere with densities that are ~1-2 orders of magnitude larger than previously predicted. Using an exospheric model that reproduces the H altitude-density profile, allows us to constrain the so far unknown H_2 density at the surface which is ~2-3 orders of magnitude smaller than previously assumed. These findings demonstrate the importance (1) of dissociation processes in Mercury’s exosphere and (2) of in-situ measurements giving complementary evidence of processes to remote observations, that will be realized in the near future by the BepiColombo mission.