five

New Constraints on Pluto's Sputnik Planitia Ice Sheet from a Coupled Reorientation-Climate Model

收藏
DataCite Commons2023-09-15 更新2025-04-16 收录
下载链接:
https://dataverse.jpl.nasa.gov/citation?persistentId=doi:10.48577/jpl.XFRYNI
下载链接
链接失效反馈
官方服务:
资源简介:
We present a coupled reorientation and climate model, to understand how true polar wander (TPW) and atmospheric condensation worked together to create the Sputnik Planitia (SP) glacier and reorient it to its present-day location on Pluto. SP is located at 18◦N, 178◦E, very close to the anti-Charon point, and it has been previously shown that this location can be explained by TPW reorientation of an impact basin as it fills with N2 ice. We readdress that hypothesis while including a more accurate treatment of Pluto’s climate and orbital obliquity cycle. Our model again finds that TPW is a viable mechanism for the formation and present-day location of SP. We find that the initial impact basin could have been located north of the present-day location, at latitudes between 35◦N and 50◦N. The empty basin is constrained to be 2.5 – 3 km deep, with enough N2 available to form at most a 1 – 2 km glacier. Larger N2 inventories reorient too close to the anti-Charon point. After reaching the final location, the glacier undergoes short periods of sublimation and re-condensation on the order of ten meters of ice, due Pluto’s variable obliquity cycle, which drives short periods of reorientation of a few km. The obliquity cycle also has a role in the onset of glacial infilling; some initial basin locations are only able to begin accumulating N2 ice at certain points during the obliquity cycle. We also explore the sensitivity of the coupled model to albedo, initial obliquity, and Pluto’s orbit.
提供机构:
Root
创建时间:
2023-09-15
二维码
社区交流群
二维码
科研交流群
商业服务