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A patchy CO_2 exosphere on Ganymede revealed by the James Webb Space Telescope

journal contribution
posted on 2024-10-07, 10:34 authored by Dominique Bockelee-Morvan, Olivier Poch, Francois Leblanc, Vladimir Zakharov, Emmanuel Lellouch, Eric Quirico, Imke de Pater, Thierry Fouchet, Pablo Rodriguez-Ovalle, Lorenz Roth, Fr'ed'eric Merlin, Stefan Duling, Joachim Saur, Adrien Masson, Patrick Fry, Samantha Trumbo, Michael Brown, Richard Cartwright, St'ephanie Cazaux, Katherine de Kleer, N Leigh Fletcher, Zachariah Milby, Audrey Moingeon, Alessandro Mura, S Glenn Orton, Bernard Schmitt, Federico Tosi, H Michael Wong
Jupiter's icy moon Ganymede has a tenuous exosphere produced by sputtering and possibly sublimation of water ice. To date, only atomic hydrogen and oxygen have been directly detected in this exosphere. Here, we present observations of Ganymede's CO$_2$ exosphere obtained with the James Webb Space Telescope. CO$_2$ gas is observed over different terrain types, mainly over those exposed to intense Jovian plasma irradiation, as well as over some bright or dark terrains. Despite warm surface temperatures, the CO$_2$ abundance over equatorial subsolar regions is low. CO$_2$ vapor has the highest abundance over the north polar cap of the leading hemisphere, reaching a surface pressure of 1 pbar. From modeling we show that the local enhancement observed near 12 h local time in this region can be explained by the presence of cold traps enabling CO$_2$ adsorption. However, whether the release mechanism in this high-latitude region is sputtering or sublimation remains unclear. The north polar cap of the leading hemisphere also has unique surface-ice properties, probably linked to the presence of the large atmospheric CO$_2$ excess over this region. These CO$_2$ molecules might have been initially released in the atmosphere after the radiolysis of CO$_2$ precursors, or from the sputtering of CO$_2$ embedded in the H$_2$O ice bedrock. Dark terrains (regiones), more widespread on the north versus south polar regions, possibly harbor CO$_2$ precursors. CO$_2$ molecules would then be redistributed via cold trapping on ice-rich terrains of the polar cap and be diurnally released and redeposited on these terrains. Ganymede's CO$_2$ exosphere highlights the complexity of surface-atmosphere interactions on Jupiter's icy Galilean moons.

History

Author affiliation

College of Science & Engineering Physics & Astronomy

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Astronomy & Astrophysics

Publisher

EDP Sciences

issn

0004-6361

eissn

1432-0746

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2024-10-07

Notes

Embargo until publication

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Leigh Fletcher

Deposit date

2024-10-04

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