• Title of article

    Atmospheric control of the cooling rate of impact melts and cryolavas on Titan’s surface

  • Author/Authors

    Davies، نويسنده , , Ashley Gerard and Sotin، نويسنده , , Christophe and Matson، نويسنده , , Dennis L. and Castillo-Rogez، نويسنده , , Julie and Johnson، نويسنده , , Torrence V. and Choukroun، نويسنده , , Mathieu and Baines، نويسنده , , Kevin H.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
  • Pages
    9
  • From page
    887
  • To page
    895
  • Abstract
    As on Earth, Titan’s atmosphere plays a major role in the cooling of heated surfaces. We have assessed the mechanisms by which Titan’s atmosphere, dominantly N2 at a surface pressure of 1.5 × 105 Pa, cools a warm or heated surface. These heated areas can be caused by impacts generating melt sheets and (possibly) by endogenic processes emplacing cryolavas (a low-temperature liquid that freezes on the surface). We find that for a cooling cryolava flow, lava lake, or impact melt body, heat loss is mainly driven by atmospheric convection. Radiative heat loss, a dominant heat loss mechanism with terrestrial silicate lava flows, plays only a minor role on Titan. Long-term cooling and solidification are dependent on melt sheet or flow thickness, and also local climate, because persistent winds will speed cooling. Relatively rapid cooling caused by winds reduces the detectability of these thermal events by instruments measuring surface thermal emission. Because surface temperature drops by ≈50% within ≈1 day of emplacement, fresh flows or impact melt may be difficult to detect via thermal emission unless an active eruption is directly observed. Cooling of flow or impact melt surfaces are orders of magnitude faster on Titan than on airless moons (e.g., Enceladus or Europa). gh upper surfaces cool fast, the internal cooling and solidification process is relatively slow. Cryolava flow lengths are, therefore, more likely to be volume (effusion) limited, rather than cooling-limited. More detailed modeling awaits constraints on the thermophysical properties of the likely cryomagmas and surface materials.
  • Keywords
    Titan , Enceladus , Saturn , Satellites , Impact processes , volcanism
  • Journal title
    Icarus
  • Serial Year
    2010
  • Journal title
    Icarus
  • Record number

    2377708