What will Europa sound like? Modeling seismic background noise due to tidal cracking events
Abstract
Seismology is a powerful tool for illuminating internal structure and dynamics in planetary bodies. With the plan for a Europa lander next decade, we have the opportunity to place a seismometer on the surface and greatly increase our knowledge of internal structure of the ocean world. In order to maximize return from such an instrument, we need to understand both predicted signals and noise. Instrument noise can be quantified well on Earth, but estimating the ambient noise of a planetary body is significantly more challenging. For Europa, we make an initial range of estimates of ambient noise due to ongoing tidally induced events within the ice shell. We estimate a range of cumulative moment releases based on tidal dissipation energy, and then create an assumed Gutenberg-Richter relationship (e.g. Golombek et al., 1992). We then use this relationship to generate random realizations of event catalogs with a length of 1 day, including all events down to a moment magnitude of -1, and generate continuous 3 component seismic records from these catalogs using a spectral element method (Instaseis/AxiSEM, van Driel et al., 2015). The seismic data are calculated using a range of thermodynamically self-consistent layered models of Europa structure, varying ice shell thickness and attenuation (e.g. Cammarano et al., 2006). The noise records are then used to define overall spectral characteristics of the noise and to test methods to take advantage of the ambient noise, such as autocorrelation techniques. Ambient noise characteristics are also compared with candidate instrument noise models which may be included in future Europa missions. F. Cammarano, V. Lekic, M. Manga, M.P. Panning, and B.A. Romanowicz (2006), "Long-period seismology on Europa: 1. Physically consistent interior models," J. Geophys. Res., 111, E12009, doi: 10.1029/2006JE002710. M. van Driel, L. Krischer, S.C. Stähler, K. Hosseini, and T. Nissen-Meyer (2015), "Instaseis: instant global seismograms based on a broadband waveform database," Solid Earth, 6, 701-717, doi: 10.5194/se-6-701-2015. M.P. Golombek, W.B. Banerdt, K.L. Tanaka, and D.M. Tralli (1992), "A prediction of Mars seismicity from surface faulting," Science, 258, 979-981.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2016
- Bibcode:
- 2016AGUFM.P31A2083P
- Keywords:
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- 0774 Dynamics;
- CRYOSPHEREDE: 4540 Ice mechanics and air/sea/ice exchange processes;
- OCEANOGRAPHY: PHYSICALDE: 5422 Ices;
- PLANETARY SCIENCES: SOLID SURFACE PLANETSDE: 8045 Role of fluids;
- STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY