Monday, September 14, 2020

Jupiter’s moons may keep each other toasty

Marbles sit in the dark under a spotlight

Interactions between Jupiter’s moons may bear more responsibility for their warm interiors than heating from Jupiter alone, researchers report.

Jupiter’s moons are hot. Well, hotter than they should be, for being so far from the sun.

In a process called tidal heating, gravitational tugs from Jupiter’s moons and the planet itself stretch and squish the moons enough to warm them. As a result, some of the icy moons contain interiors warm enough to host oceans of liquid water, and in the case of the rocky moon Io, tidal heating melts rock into magma.

Researchers previously believed that the gas giant Jupiter was responsible for most of the tidal heating associated with the liquid interiors of the moons. But the new study in Geophysical Research Letters may upend that idea.

4 of Jupiter's moons are shown against a black background
The four largest moons of Jupiter in order of distance from Jupiter: Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto. (Credit: NASA)

“It’s surprising because the moons are so much smaller than Jupiter. You wouldn’t expect them to be able to create such a large tidal response,” says lead author Hamish Hay, a postdoctoral fellow at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California who did the research when he was a graduate student in the University of Arizona Lunar and Planetary Laboratory.

Jupiter’s 80 moons

Understanding how the moons influence each other is important because it can shed light on the evolution of the moon system as a whole. Jupiter has nearly 80 moons, the four largest of which are Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto.

“Maintaining subsurface oceans against freezing over geological times requires a fine balance between internal heating and heat loss, and yet we have several pieces of evidence that Europa, Ganymede, Callisto, and other moons should be ocean worlds,” says coauthor Antony Trinh, a postdoctoral research fellow in the Lunar and Planetary Lab.

“Io, the Galilean moon closest to Jupiter, shows widespread volcanic activity, another consequence of tidal heating, but at a higher intensity likely experienced by other terrestrial planets, like Earth, in their early history.

“Ultimately, we want to understand the source of all this heat, both for its influence on the evolution and habitability of the many worlds across the solar system and beyond.”

Ocean depths and tidal resonance

The trick to tidal heating is a phenomenon called tidal resonance.

“Resonance creates loads more heating,” Hay says. “Basically, if you push any object or system and let go, it will wobble at its own natural frequency. If you keep on pushing the system at the right frequency, those oscillations get bigger and bigger, just like when you’re pushing a swing. If you push the swing at the right time, it goes higher, but get the timing wrong and the swing’s motion is dampened.”

Each moon’s natural frequency depends on the depth of its ocean.

“These tidal resonances were known before this work, but only known for tides due to Jupiter, which can only create this resonance effect if the ocean is really thin (less than 300 meters or under 1,000 feet), which is unlikely,” Hay says.

“When tidal forces act on a global ocean, it creates a tidal wave on the surface that ends up propagating around the equator with a certain frequency, or period.”

According to the researchers’ model, Jupiter’s influence alone can’t create tides with the right frequency to resonate with the moons because of the moons’ thick oceans. Only when the researchers added in the gravitational influence of the other moons did they start to see tidal forces approaching the natural frequencies of the moons.

When the tides generated by other objects in Jupiter’s moon system match each moon’s own resonant frequency, the moon begins to experience more heating than that due to tides raised by Jupiter alone, and in the most extreme cases, this could result in the melting of ice or rock internally.

For moons to experience tidal resonance, their oceans must be tens to hundreds of kilometers—at most a few hundred miles—thick, which is in range of scientists’ current estimates. However, there are some caveats to the researchers’ findings.

Their model assumes that tidal resonances never get too extreme, Hay says. He and his team want to return to this variable in the model and see what happens when they lift that constraint. Hay also hopes that future studies will be able to infer the true depth of the oceans within these moons.

NASA’s Habitable Worlds program funded the work.

Source: University of Arizona

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