http://arxiv.org/abs/1804.10582
The evolution of Europa’s water-product exosphere over its 85-hour day, based on current models, has not been shown to exhibit any diurnal asymmetries. Here we simulate Europa’s exosphere using a 3-D Monte Carlo routine including, for the first time, the role of Europa’s rotation on the evolution of exospheric molecules throughout the orbit. We focus on O$_2$, sputtered by a trailing hemisphere source with a temperature-dependence under isotropic plasma conditions. We find that the O$_2$ component, while global, is not homogenous in Europa local time. Rather, the O$_2$ accumulates at the dusk hemisphere. When rotation is explicitly excluded, no diurnal asymmetries exist. We find that the assumed thermal-dependence on the O$_2$ source is critical for a diurnal asymmetry: the diurnal surface temperature profile is imprinted on to the near-surface O$_2$ atmosphere, due to the small hop times of the non-adsorbing O$_2$ effectively rotating with Europa. Altogether, our simulations conclude that the dusk-over-dawn asymmetry is driven by Europa’s day-night O$_2$ cycle synchronized with Europa’s orbital period based on our model assumptions on O$_2$ production and loss. This conclusion is in agreement with the recent understanding that a non-adsorbing, rotating O$_2$ source peaking at noon will naturally accumulate from dawn-to-dusk, should the O$_2$ lifetime be sufficiently long compared to the orbital period. Lastly we compare hemispherically-averaged dusk-over-dawn ratios to the recently observed oxygen emission data by the Hubble Space Telescope. We find that while the simulations are globally consistent with brighter oxygen emission at dusk than at dawn, the orbital evolution of the asymmetries in our simulations can be improved by ameliorating the O$_2$ source & loss rates, and possibly adsorption onto the regolith.
A. Oza, F. Leblanc, R. Johnson, et. al.
Mon, 30 Apr 18
-120/63
Comments: 15 pages, 7 figures, Submitted to PSS
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