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  • JiaLing Lv, ChongJing Yuan, Fei He, and BeiLi Ying. 2025: The density distribution and 58.4 nm radiation intensity of interstellar helium in the heliosphere: a model simulation. Earth and Planetary Physics. DOI: 10.26464/epp2025070
    Citation: JiaLing Lv, ChongJing Yuan, Fei He, and BeiLi Ying. 2025: The density distribution and 58.4 nm radiation intensity of interstellar helium in the heliosphere: a model simulation. Earth and Planetary Physics. DOI: 10.26464/epp2025070
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The density distribution and 58.4 nm radiation intensity of interstellar helium in the heliosphere: a model simulation

  • Research on the interstellar medium and its interaction with the solar system constitutes a significant topic in planetary physics. As the Sun traverses the local interstellar cloud, the interstellar neutrals penetrate the heliosphere, forming the interstellar wind, and scatter solar extreme ultraviolet (EUV) emission lines. The intensity of the scattered radiation is an indicator of the characteristic parameters of the interstellar wind, which are crucial for characterizing the heliosphere, the interstellar medium, and the evolution of the solar system. Meanwhile, a powerful method for studying stellar evolution is investigating their EUV emissions. The only ongoing mission conducting an EUV full-sky survey is the relay satellite Queqiao-2. Due to the strong absorption of the interstellar medium at EUV wavelengths, it is essential to study these influences through modelling efforts. In this study, we reviewed classical modelling methods for the density distribution of the interstellar helium atoms in the heliosphere and the corresponding 58.4 nm radiation intensity. We established the density and intensity models for different orbital positions of Earth’s revolution. It is found that when the Earth enters the helium focusing cone in the downwind region, both the helium density and the 58.4 nm radiation intensity increase rapidly, with the temperature effect being particularly important. The radiation intensity in the downwind direction can be 170 times that in the upwind direction. Some negligible factors were omitted for simplicity, such as the effects of the solar line width and Doppler shift. Our research would serve as an aid to the interpretation of the EUV observations in the full-sky survey conducted by Queqiao-2.
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