A comprehensive revisit of select Galileo/NIMS observations of Europa
Ishan Mishra, Nikole Lewis, Jonathan Lunine, Kevin P. Hand, Paul, Helfenstein, R.W. Carlson, Ryan J. MacDonald

TL;DR
This study reanalyzes Galileo NIMS spectra of Europa's surface using a Bayesian framework with the Hapke model, revealing dominant sulfuric acid hydrate presence and refining detection confidence of water ice, while ruling out CO2 and SO2.
Contribution
It introduces a Bayesian inference approach with physical parameters to reassess Europa's surface composition from NIMS data, improving detection confidence and addressing prior methodological limitations.
Findings
Sulfuric acid hydrate dominates the spectra analyzed.
Water ice is detected with varying confidence levels.
No evidence found for CO₂ or SO₂ in the spectra.
Abstract
The Galileo Near Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (NIMS) collected spectra of Europa in the 0.7-5.2 m wavelength region, which have been critical to improving our understanding of the surface composition of this moon. However, most of the work done to get constraints on abundances of species like water ice, hydrated sulfuric acid, hydrated salts and oxides have used proxy methods, such as absorption strength of spectral features or fitting a linear mixture of laboratory generated spectra. Such techniques neglect the effect of parameters degenerate with the abundances, such as the average grain-size of particles, or the porosity of the regolith. In this work we revisit three Galileo NIMS spectra, collected from observations of the trailing hemisphere of Europa, and use a Bayesian inference framework, with the Hapke reflectance model, to reassess Europa's surface composition. Our…
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