Session Details
[P-PS01]Outer Solar System Exploration Today, and Tomorrow
Fri. May 30, 2025 1:45 PM - 3:15 PM JST
Fri. May 30, 2025 4:45 AM - 6:15 AM UTC
Fri. May 30, 2025 4:45 AM - 6:15 AM UTC
301B International Conference Hall, Makuhari Messe
convener:Jun Kimura(The University of Osaka), Kunio M. Sayanagi(NASA Langley Research Center ), Fuminori Tsuchiya(Planetary Plasma and Atmospheric Research Center, Graduate School of Science, Tohoku University), Shuya Tan(Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology), Chairperson:Keigo Enya(Institute of Space and Astronautical Science), Hajime Kita(Tohoku Institute of Technology)
The giant planets shape our solar system. The physical and chemical processes they harbor provide unique opportunities to study the phenomena relevant for studying Earth and other planets, including exoplanetary systems. In this session, we welcome diverse topics encompassing the giant planets and their moons, including their origins, interiors, atmospheres, compositions, surface features, electromagnetic fields, and plasma environments. To advocate for current and future outer planets exploration (Juno, New Horizons, JUICE, Europa Clipper, Dragonfly and beyond), we also solicit contributions on future missions to explore giant planet systems (e.g., Uranus Orbiter and Probe), including how to develop better international cooperation. Discussion in this latter category will include progress in developing a solar sail mission concept for observing the Jupiter system and its Trojan asteroids. We also solicit presentations about the planning and results from observing upcoming stellar occultations by Uranus, and about new scientific results generated using data returned by space telescopes such as the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST).
[PPS01-13]Review of radio emissions induced by Jovian moons and extension to star-planet interactions★Invited Papers
*Corentin Kenelm Louis1 (1.LIRA, Observatoire de Paris, CNRS)
[PPS01-14]Radio and Plasma Wave Instruments (RPWI) aboard ESA JUICE: from the Launch (2023), via the Lunar-Earth flyby (2024), toward Venus (2025)
*Yasumasa Kasaba1, Baptiste Cecconi2, Fuminori Tsuchiya1, Hiroaki Misawa1, Hajime Kita3, Rikuto Yasuda1, Yuto Katoh1, Atsushi Kumamoto1, Tomoki Kimura1, Yoshizumi Miyoshi4, Yoshiya Kasahara5, Shoya Matsuda5, Satoshi Yagitani6, Mitsunori Ozaki5, Hirotsugu Kojima6, Satoshi Kurita6, Jan-Erik Wahlund7, JUICE RPWI (1.Tohoku University, 2.Obs de Paris, 3.Tohoku Institute of Technology, 4.Nagoya University, 5.Kanazawa University, 6.Kyoto University, 7.IRF Uppsala)
[PPS01-15]EMIC Waves at Ganymede Detected by Juno’s Magnetic Field Observation
*Shinnosuke Satoh1, Koki Tachi1, Fuminori Tsuchiya1, Yuto Katoh1, Yasumasa Kasaba1, John E P Connerney2,3 (1.Tohoku University, 2.Space Research Corporation , 3.NASA Goddard Space Flight Center)

[PPS01-16]Ray Tracing for Titan’s Ionospheric Occultation of Saturn Radio Emissions: Implications for JUICE Mission
*Rikuto Yasuda1,2, Hiroaki Misawa1, Baptiste Cecconi2, Tomoki Kimura3, Corentin K Louis2, Lucas Grosset2, Fuminori Tsuchiya1, Yasumasa Kasaba1 (1.TOHOKU UNIVERSITY, 2.Paris Observatory, 3.Tokyo University of Science)
[PPS01-17]Geophysical and Meteorology Measurements on Dragonfly : Lessons from InSight and other missions
*Ralph Lorenz1 (1.Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory)
[PPS01-18]Development status of seismometer for geophysiocal and meteorological package onboard Dragonfly
*Hiroaki Shiraishi1, Takefumi Mitani1, Satoshi Tanaka1, Taichi Kawamura3, Keisuke Onodera12, Ryuhei Yamada4, Shunichi Kamata5, Jun Kimura6, Hiroyuki Kurokawa7, Kiwamu Nishida2, Yasuhito Sekine8, Takeshi Tsuji10, Hideki Murakami9, Ralph Lorenz11 (1.Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, Institute of Space and Astronautical Science, 2.Earthquake Research Institute / The University of Tokyo, 3.Universite Paris Cite Institut de physique du globe de Paris CNRS, 4.The University of Aizu, Revitalization and Creation Support Center, 5.Faculty of Science, Hokkaido University, 6.Osaka University, 7.The University of Tokyo, 8.Earth-Life Science Insitute, Tokyo Institute of Technology, 9.Kochi University, 10.Department of Systems Innovation, the University of Tokyo, 11.Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, 12.Institute for Planetary Materials, Okayama University)
