ALMA Observations of Io Going into and Coming out of Eclipse
Imke de Pater, Statia Luszcz-Cook, Patricio Rojo, Erin Redwing,, Katherine de Kleer, Arielle Moullet

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA millimeter observations to analyze Io's volcanic activity and atmospheric changes during eclipse ingress and egress, revealing rapid atmospheric reformation, volcanic contributions, and insights into surface chemistry.
Contribution
First detailed millimeter-wave analysis of Io's atmospheric dynamics during eclipse transitions, linking volcanic activity to atmospheric composition and behavior.
Findings
Volcanic plumes cause high-velocity line profile wings.
SO$_2$ atmosphere re-forms linearly after eclipse.
Volcanic sources contribute 30-50 ext% to atmospheric SO$_2$.
Abstract
We present 1-mm observations constructed from ALMA [Atacama Large (sub)Millimeter Array] data of SO, SO and KCl when Io went from sunlight into eclipse (20 March 2018), and vice versa (2 and 11 September 2018). There is clear evidence of volcanic plumes on 20 March and 2 September. The plumes distort the line profiles, causing high-velocity (500 m/s) wings, and red/blue-shifted shoulders in the line profiles. During eclipse ingress, the SO flux density dropped exponentially, and the atmosphere reformed in a linear fashion when re-emerging in sunlight, with a "post-eclipse brightening" after 10 minutes. While both the in-eclipse decrease and in-sunlight increase in SO was more gradual than for SO, the fact that SO decreased at all is evidence that self-reactions at the surface are important and fast, and that in-sunlight photolysis of SO is the dominant…
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