Strong tidal dissipation in Saturn and constraints on Enceladus' thermal state from astrometry
V. Lainey, \"O. Karatekin, J. Desmars, S. Charnoz, J-E. Arlot, N., Emelyanov, C. Le Poncin-Lafitte, S. Mathis, F. Remus, G. Tobie, J-P. Zahn

TL;DR
This study uses over a century of astrometric data to measure Saturn's tidal dissipation, revealing a higher-than-expected dissipation rate that impacts models of moon heating and formation.
Contribution
It provides the first empirical measurement of Saturn's tidal ratio (k2/Q) from astrometry, challenging existing theories about tidal dissipation mechanisms.
Findings
Saturn's tidal dissipation is about ten times higher than theoretical estimates.
Enceladus' heat emission can be explained by the measured eccentricity equilibrium.
The dissipation rate shows little sensitivity to tidal frequency, suggesting alternative dissipation mechanisms.
Abstract
Tidal interactions between Saturn and its satellites play a crucial role in both the orbital migration of the satellites and the heating of their interiors. Therefore constraining the tidal dissipation of Saturn (here the ratio k2/Q) opens the door to the past evolution of the whole system. If Saturn's tidal ratio can be determined at different frequencies, it may also be possible to constrain the giant planet's interior structure, which is still uncertain. Here, we try to determine Saturn's tidal ratio through its current effect on the orbits of the main moons, using astrometric data spanning more than a century. We find an intense tidal dissipation (k2/Q= (2.3 \pm 0.7) \times 10-4), which is about ten times higher than the usual value estimated from theoretical arguments. As a consequence, eccentricity equilibrium for Enceladus can now account for the huge heat emitted from Enceladus'…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
