An attempt to detect transient changes in Io's SO2 and NaCl atmosphere
L. Roth, J. Boissier, A. Moullet, A. Sanchez-Monge, K. de Kleer, M., Yoneda, R. Hikida, H. Kita, F. Tsuchiya, A. Blcker, G. R. Gladstone, D., Grodent, N. Ivchenko, E. Lellouch, K. Retherford, J. Saur, P. Schilke D., Strobel, S. Thorwirth

TL;DR
This study investigates transient atmospheric changes on Io by analyzing SO2 and NaCl levels, finding stability in NaCl and variable SO2, which challenges previous assumptions about volcanic activity's impact on atmospheric composition.
Contribution
First direct observational evidence showing stable NaCl levels and variable SO2 in Io's atmosphere, questioning the link between volcanic activity and atmospheric changes.
Findings
NaCl column density remained stable over observations.
SO2 column density varied by about 30% between December 2016 and March 2017.
No correlation found between volcanic hot spots and sodium cloud activity.
Abstract
Io's atmosphere is predominately SO2 sustained by a combination of volcanic outgassing and sublimation. The loss from the atmosphere is the main mass source for Jupiter's large magnetosphere. Previous studies attributed various transient phenomena in Io's environment and Jupiter's magnetosphere to a sudden change in the mass loss from the atmosphere supposedly triggered by a change in volcanic activity. Since the gas in volcanic plumes does not escape directly, such causal correlation would require a transient volcano-induced change in atmospheric abundance, which has never been observed so far. Here we report four observations of atmospheric SO2 and NaCl obtained with the IRAM NOEMA interferometer. These observations are compared to measurements of volcanic hot spots and Io's neutral and plasma environment. We find a stable NaCl column density in Io's atmosphere. The SO2 column density…
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