Source location of the narrowbanded radio bursts at Uranus - Evidence of a cusp source

While Voyager 2 was inbound to Uranus, radio bursts of narrow bandwidth (less than 5 kHz) were detected between 17-116 kHz. These R-X mode bursts, designated n-bursts, were of short duration, tended to occur when the north magnetic pole tipped toward the spacecraft, and increased in occurrence with...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Farrell, W. M., Desch, M. D., Kaiser, M. L., Kurth, W. S.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 1990
Subjects:
91
Online Access:http://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=19900040342
Description
Summary:While Voyager 2 was inbound to Uranus, radio bursts of narrow bandwidth (less than 5 kHz) were detected between 17-116 kHz. These R-X mode bursts, designated n-bursts, were of short duration, tended to occur when the north magnetic pole tipped toward the spacecraft, and increased in occurrence with increasing solar wind density. An explicit determination of the burst source location is presented, based upon fitting the region of detection at high and low frequencies to field-aligned, symmetric cones. The region of good fits was located between the north magnetic pole and the rotational pole, corresponding approximately to the northern polar cusp.