A CO2 cycle on Ariel? Radiolytic production and migration to low latitude cold traps
Richard J. Cartwright, Tom A. Nordheim, David DeColibus, William M., Grundy, Bryan J. Holler, Chloe B. Beddingfield, Michael M. Sori, Michael P., Lucas, Catherine M. Elder, Leonardo H. Regoli, Dale P. Cruikshank, Joshua P., Emery, Erin J. Leonard, Corey J. Cochrane

TL;DR
This study investigates the distribution and formation mechanisms of CO2 ice on Ariel, revealing latitudinal variations and suggesting migration processes driven by radiolytic production and cold trap accumulation.
Contribution
It provides new spectral data across different latitudes and proposes a model of CO2 migration and formation on Ariel's surface, enhancing understanding of its volatile cycle.
Findings
CO2 ice is mainly on Ariel's trailing hemisphere.
CO2 band strengths decrease at higher latitudes.
Evidence suggests radiolytic production and migration of CO2.
Abstract
CO2 ice is present on the trailing hemisphere of Ariel but is mostly absent from its leading hemisphere. The leading/trailing hemispherical asymmetry in the distribution of CO2 ice is consistent with radiolytic production of CO2, formed by charged particle bombardment of H2O ice and carbonaceous material in Ariel's regolith. This longitudinal distribution of CO2 on Ariel was previously characterized using 13 near-infrared reflectance spectra collected at 'low' sub-observer latitudes between 30S to 30N. Here, we investigated the distribution of CO2 ice on Ariel using 18 new spectra: two collected over low sub-observer latitudes, five collected at 'mid' sub-observer latitudes (31 - 44N), and eleven collected over 'high' sub-observer latitudes (45 - 51N). Analysis of these data indicates that CO2 ice is primarily concentrated on Ariel's trailing hemisphere. However, CO2 ice band strengths…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtmospheric Ozone and Climate · Astro and Planetary Science · Methane Hydrates and Related Phenomena
