Near-Surface Ice on Mercury and the Moon: A Topographic Thermal Model
A thermal model that can be easily adapted to craters of arbitrary shape is developed and applied to high-latitude impact craters on Mercury and the Moon, Chao Meng Fu crater at -87.5°L on Mercury, an unnamed bowl-shaped crater at 86.7°L on Mercury, and Peary crater at 88.6°L on the Moon. For an ass...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Icarus (New York, N.Y. 1962) N.Y. 1962), 1994-10, Vol.111 (2), p.441-455 |
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Zusammenfassung: | A thermal model that can be easily adapted to craters of arbitrary shape is developed and applied to high-latitude impact craters on Mercury and the Moon, Chao Meng Fu crater at -87.5°L on Mercury, an unnamed bowl-shaped crater at 86.7°L on Mercury, and Peary crater at 88.6°L on the Moon. For an assumed input topography and grid of surface elements, the model computes for each element the irradiation from direct insolation and reflected and emitted radiation from other elements, taking into account shadowing by the walls of the crater, partial obscuration of the solar disk near the poles and the diurnal, orbital, and seasonal cycles. Temperatures are computed over the surface grid as functions of depth and time from the surface to a specified depth and over the pertinent astronomical cycles, including the effects of direct and indirect surface irradiation, infrared radiation, heat conduction, and interior heating. Vapor fluxes and ice recession times are computed as functions of ice depth over the surface grid. Temperatures profiles, vapor fluxes, and ice recession times were computed for flat surfaces not associated with craters near the poles of Mercury and the Moon. It was found that water ice could have existed throughout geologic time within the maximum radar detection depth of recent observation of Mercury (J. K. Harmon and M. A. Slade, 1992,
Science 258, 640-643) poleward of ∼87-88°L on Mercury and poleward of ∼73°L on the moon. For Chao Meng Fu crater it was found that ∼40% of the crater floor is permanently shadowed from direct solar insolation, while the remainder of the crater floor is periodically illuminated by a partially obscured Sun. Temperatures at the upper levels of the south wall can slightly exceed 550 K. Surface temperatures in the permanently shadowed region of the crater floor are under ∼130 K, which could have allowed water ice to exist throughout geologic time within the radar detection depth of recent observation of Mercury. For the small bowl-shaped crater on Mercury, it was found that most of the crater is permanently shadowed from direct solar radiation, except for a narrow semicircular band bordering the north rim. However, temperatures in the permanently shadowed region periodically reach a maximum near ∼315 K due to efficient heating of the small crater by thermal emission and reflection from the small sunlit region, which periodically reaches temperatures exceeding 630 K. Water ice could not have existed throughout geologi |
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ISSN: | 0019-1035 1090-2643 |
DOI: | 10.1006/icar.1994.1155 |