Volatile transport modeling on Triton with new observational constraints
T. Bertrand, E. Lellouch, B. J. Holler, L. A. Young, B. Schmitt, J., Marques Oliveira, B. Sicardy, F. Forget, W. M. Grundy, F. Merlin, M., Vangvichith, E. Millour, P. Schenk, C. Hansen, O. White, J. Moore, J., Stansberry, A. Oza, D. Dubois, E. Quirico, D. Cruikshank

TL;DR
This study adapts a volatile transport model from Pluto to Triton, using observational data to simulate its volatile cycles, surface pressure, and ice distribution, providing predictions for future observations.
Contribution
It introduces a Triton-specific volatile transport model calibrated with observational constraints, enhancing understanding of Triton's climate and surface-atmosphere interactions.
Findings
Triton's poles act as cold traps for volatile ices.
A large N2 ice reservoir supports a permanent southern cap.
Predicted evolution of surface pressure and ice distribution for the next decades.
Abstract
Neptune's moon Triton shares many similarities with Pluto, including volatile cycles of N2, CH4 and CO, and represents a benchmark case for the study of surface-atmosphere interactions on volatile-rich KBOs. Within the context of New Horizons observations of Pluto as well as recent Earth-based observations of Triton, we adapt a Plutonian VTM to Triton, and test its ability to simulate its volatile cycles, thereby aiding our understanding of its climate. We present VTM simulations exploring the volatile cycles on Triton over long-term and seasonal timescales for varying model parameters. We explore what scenarios and model parameters allow for a best match of the available observations. In particular, our set of observational constraints include Voyager 2 observations, ground-based NIR (0.8 to 2.4 {\mu}m) disk-integrated spectra and the evolution of surface pressure as retrieved from…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Planetary Science and Exploration · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
