Abstract
During the first flyby of the BepiColombo composite spacecraft at
Mercury in October
2021 ion spectrometers observed two intense spectral lines with energies
between 10 and
70eV. The spectral lines persisted also at larger distances from Mercury
and were ob-
served again at lower intensity during cruise phase in March 2022 and at
the second and
third Mercury flyby as a single band. The ion composition indicates that
water is the
dominant gas source. The outgassing causes the composite spacecraft to
charge up to
a negative potential of up to -50V. The distribution and intensity of
the lower energy
signal depends on the intensity of low energy electron fluxes around the
spacecraft which
again depend on the magnetic field orientation. We interpret the
observation as being
caused by water outgassing from different source locations on the
spacecraft being ion-
ized in two different regions of the surrounding potential. The
interpretation is confirmed
by two dimensional particle-in-cell simulations.