Longitudinal Variation of H2O Ice Absorption on Miranda
Abstract
Many tidally locked icy satellites in the outer solar system show leading/trailing hemispherical asymmetries in the strength of near-infrared (NIR) H2O ice absorption bands, in which the absorption bands are stronger on the leading hemisphere. This is often attributed to a combination of magnetospheric irradiation effects and impact gardening, which can modify grain size, expose fresh ice, and produce dark contaminating compounds that reduce the strength of absorption features. Previous research identified this leading/trailing asymmetry on the four largest classical Uranian satellites but did not find a clear leading/trailing asymmetry on Miranda, the smallest and innermost classical moon. We undertook an extensive observational campaign to investigate variations of the NIR spectral signature of H2O ice with longitude on Miranda's northern hemisphere. We acquired 22 new spectra with the TripleSpec spectrograph on the ARC 3.5 m telescope and four new spectra with GNIRS on Gemini North. Our analysis also includes three unpublished and seven previously published spectra taken with SpeX on the 3 m IRTF. We confirm that Miranda has no substantial leading/trailing hemispherical asymmetry in the strength of its H2O ice absorption features. We additionally find evidence for an anti-Uranus/sub-Uranus asymmetry in the strength of the 1.5 μm H2O ice band that is not seen on the other Uranian satellites, suggesting that additional endogenic or exogenic processes influence the longitudinal distribution of H2O ice band strengths on Miranda.
- Publication:
-
The Planetary Science Journal
- Pub Date:
- May 2022
- DOI:
- 10.3847/PSJ/ac694e
- arXiv:
- arXiv:2204.10832
- Bibcode:
- 2022PSJ.....3..119D
- Keywords:
-
- Uranian satellites;
- Planetary surfaces;
- Surface composition;
- Surface ices;
- Surface processes;
- 1750;
- 2113;
- 2115;
- 2117;
- 2116;
- Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics
- E-Print:
- 40 pages, 19 figures. Accepted for publication in PSJ