Title of article
The temperature and width of an active fissure on Enceladus measured with Cassini VIMS during the 14 April 2012 South Pole flyover
Author/Authors
Goguen، نويسنده , , Jay D. and Buratti، نويسنده , , Bonnie J. and Brown، نويسنده , , Robert H. and Clark، نويسنده , , Roger N. and Nicholson، نويسنده , , Phillip D. and Hedman، نويسنده , , Matthew M. and Howell، نويسنده , , Robert R. and Sotin، نويسنده , , Christophe and Cruikshank، نويسنده , , Dale P. and Baines، نويسنده , , Kevin H. and Lawrence، نويسنده , , Kenneth J. and Spencer، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages
10
From page
1128
To page
1137
Abstract
The width and temperature of the active fissures on Saturn’s satellite Enceladus provide key observable constraints on physical models of these geyser-like eruptions. We analyze a sequence of high spatial resolution near-infrared spectra acquired with VIMS at 0.025 s intervals during a 74 km altitude flyover of the South Pole of Enceladus by the Cassini spacecraft on 14 April 2012 UTC. A thermal-emission spectrum covering 3- to 5-μm wavelengths was detected as the field of view crossed one of the four major fissures, Baghdad Sulcus, within 1 km of 82.36S latitude and 28.24W longitude. We interpret this spectrum as thermal emission from a linear fissure with temperature 197 ± 20 K and width 9 m. At the above wavelengths, the spectrum is dominated by the warmest temperature component. Looking downward into the fissure at only 13° from the vertical, we conclude that our results measure the temperature of the interior fissure walls (and the H2O vapor) at depths within 40 m of the surface.
Keywords
Enceladus , Infrared observations , satellites , surfaces , Saturn , Satellites , geological processes
Journal title
Icarus
Serial Year
2013
Journal title
Icarus
Record number
2380101
Link To Document