Modeling glacial flow on and onto Pluto's Sputnik Planitia
O.M. Umurhan, A.D. Howard, J.M. Moore, A.M. Earle, R.P. Binzel, S.A., Stern, P.M. Schenk, R.A. Beyer, O.L. White, F. NImmo, W.B. McKinnon, K., Ennico, C.B. Olkin, H.A. Weaver, L.A. Young

TL;DR
This paper develops a laminar flow model for solid nitrogen ice on Pluto's Sputnik Planitia, explaining observed surface features and estimating flow conditions based on thermophysical properties.
Contribution
It introduces a new evolutionary glacial flow model for nitrogen ice on Pluto, incorporating rheology and thermophysical properties to interpret surface features.
Findings
Nitrogen ice layers less than 400-1000 meters flow laminarily.
Surface features suggest recent shallow topography changes.
Flow lobes may result from wet nitrogen glacial movement.
Abstract
Observations of Pluto's surface made by the New Horizons spacecraft indicates present-day nitrogen ice glaciation in and around the basin known as Sputnik Planum. Motivated by these observations, we have developed an evolutionary glacial flow model of solid nitrogen ice taking into account its published thermophysical and rheologies properties. This model assumes that glacial ice layers flow laminarly and have low aspect ratios which permits a vertically integrated mathematical formulation. We assess the conditions for the validity of laminar nitrogen ice motion by revisiting the problem of the onset of solid-state buoyant convection of nitrogen ice for a variety of bottom thermal boundary conditions. Subject to uncertainties in nitrogen ice rheology, nitrogen ice layers are estimated to flow laminarly for thicknesses less than 400-1000 meters. The resulting mass-flux formulation for…
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