@article{1214, keywords = {hydrogen, Methane, aurora, electron, Galileo (spacecraft), induced response, Jupiter, magnetic field, magnetohydrodynamics, magnetosphere, Moon, Upper atmosphere, article, astronomy, Atmosphere, atomic particle, Aurorae, electromagnetism, Ganymede footprint, hydrodynamics, Infrared spectroscopy, magnetic field, magnetohydrodynamic wave, priority journal, space flight, Ultraviolet radiation}, author = {A. Mura and A. Adriani and J.E.P. Connerney and S. Bolton and F. Altieri and F. Bagenal and B. Bonfond and B.M. Dinelli and J.-C. Gérard and T. Greathouse and D. Grodent and S. Levin and B. Mauk and M.L. Moriconi and J. Saur and J.H. Waite and M. Amoroso and A. Cicchetti and F. Fabiano and G. Filacchione and D. Grassi and A. Migliorini and R. Noschese and A. Olivieri and G. Piccioni and C. Plainaki and G. Sindoni and R. Sordini and F. Tosi and D. Turrini}, title = {Juno observations of spot structures and a split tail in Io-induced aurorae on Jupiter}, year = {2018}, journal = {Science}, url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85049629510&doi=10.1126%2fscience.aat1450&partnerID=40&md5=d03455683baf75d0a7fe64835e570ab2}, doi = {10.1126/science.aat1450}, }