Title of article
Survival of water ice in Jupiter Trojans
Author/Authors
Guilbert-Lepoutre، نويسنده , , Aurélie، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
7
From page
232
To page
238
Abstract
Jupiter Trojans appear to be a key population of small bodies to study and test the models of the Solar System formation and evolution. Because understanding the evolution of Trojans can bring strong and unique constraints on the origins of our planetary system, a significant observational effort has been undertaken to unveil their physical characteristics. The data gathered so far are consistent with Trojans having volatile-rich interiors (possibly water ice) and volatile-poor surfaces (fine grained silicates). Since water ice is not thermodynamically stable against sublimation at the surface of an object located at ∼5 AU, such layering seems consistent with past outgassing. In this work, we study the thermal history of Trojans after the formation of a dust mantle by possible past outgassing, so as to constrain the depth at which water ice could be stable. We find that it could have survived 100 m below the surface, even if Trojans orbited close to the Sun for ∼10,000 years, as suggested by the most recent dynamical models. Water ice should be found ∼10 m below the surface in most cases, and below 10 cm in the polar regions in some cases.
Keywords
ICES , Trojan asteroids , comets , Thermal histories
Journal title
Icarus
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Icarus
Record number
2380271
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