Title of article
Resurfacing of Titan by ammonia-water cryomagma
Author/Authors
Mitri، نويسنده , , Giuseppe and Showman، نويسنده , , Adam P. and Lunine، نويسنده , , Jonathan I. and Lopes، نويسنده , , Rosaly M.C.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
9
From page
216
To page
224
Abstract
The Cassini Titan Radar Mapper observed on Titan several large features interpreted as cryovolcanic during the October 26, 2004 pass at high northern latitudes [Lopes, R.M.C., and 43 colleagues, 2007. Icarus 186, 395–412]. To date, models of ammonia-water resurfacing have not been tied to specific events or evolutionary stages of Titan. We propose a model of cryovolcanism that involves cracking at the base of the ice shell and formation of ammonia-water pockets in the ice. As these ammonia-water pockets undergo partial freezing in the cold ice shell, the ammonia concentration in the pockets increases, decreasing the negative buoyancy of the ammonia–water mixture. If the ice shell is contaminated by silicates delivered in impacts, the liquid–solid density difference would be even less. While the liquid cannot easily become buoyant relative to the surrounding ice, these concentrated ammonia-water pockets are sufficiently close to the neutral buoyancy point that large-scale tectonic stress patterns (tides, non-synchronous rotation, satellite volume changes, solid state convection, or subsurface pressure gradients associated with topography) would enable the ammonia to erupt effusively onto the surface. Rather than suggesting steady-state volcanism over the history of the Solar System, we favor a scenario where the cryovolcanic features could have been associated with episodic (potentially late) geological activity.
Keywords
interiors , geophysics , ICES , Saturn , Satellitessurfaces , volcanism , Titan
Journal title
Icarus
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Icarus
Record number
2376233
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