论文标题
Callisto的主要半球上含硫物种的证据:源自木星的不规则卫星还是IO?
Evidence for sulfur-bearing species on Callisto's leading hemisphere: Sourced from Jupiter's irregular satellites or Io?
论文作者
论文摘要
我们通过分析八种在各种亚观观点纵向上收集的近红外反射光谱,调查了冰冷的伽利略月亮Callisto上是否存在含硫物种。我们测量了这些光谱中4微米特征的带面积和深度,该光谱归因于先前收集的该月亮数据集中的二氧化硫(SO2)以及碳酸盐。我们收集的所有八个光谱都显示了4微米带。与四个后尾半球光谱相比,在卡利斯托领先半球上收集的四个光谱显示出明显更强的4微米带(> 3 sigma差异)。我们将Callisto的4-微微条带的中心波长位置和形状与各种含硫物种和碳酸盐的实验室光谱进行了比较。我们的比较表明,Callisto的4-Micron带的光谱特征类似于改变热硫的硫,以及归因于二硫代二硫化盐(HS2)的4.025微米特征。因此,我们的分析支持Callisto上S含有S的物种,但与SO2的存在不一致。在卡利斯托(Callisto)的领先半球上检测到的明显强的4微米带可能是由于与H2S的富含灰尘晶粒发生的碰撞,该晶粒起源于木星的逆行不规则卫星或磁层离子的植入,这些磁层离子来自IO上的火山活性。另外,含s的物种可能是卡利斯托的原生,并受到尘埃碰撞和更大的影响,这些污染物的影响主要在其领先方面倾斜。
We investigated whether sulfur-bearing species are present on the icy Galilean moon Callisto by analyzing eight near-infrared reflectance spectra collected over a wide range of sub-observer longitudes. We measured the band areas and depths of a 4-micron feature in these spectra, which has been attributed to sulfur dioxide (SO2), as well as carbonates, in previously collected datasets of this moon. All eight spectra we collected display the 4-micron band. The four spectra collected over Callisto's leading hemisphere display significantly stronger 4-micron bands compared to the four trailing hemisphere spectra (> 3-sigma difference). We compared the central wavelength position and shape of Callisto's 4-micron band to laboratory spectra of various sulfur-bearing species and carbonates. Our comparison demonstrates that Callisto's 4-micron band has a spectral signature similar to thermally-altered sulfur, as well as a 4.025 micron feature attributed to disulfanide (HS2). Our analysis therefore supports the presence of S-bearing species on Callisto but is not consistent with the presence of SO2. The significantly stronger 4-micron band detected on Callisto's leading hemisphere could result from collisions with H2S-rich dust grains that originate on Jupiter's retrograde irregular satellites or implantation of magnetospheric S ions that originate from volcanic activity on Io. Alternatively, S-bearing species could be native to Callisto and are exposed by dust collisions and larger impacts that drive regolith overturn, primarily on its leading side.