Near-Infrared reflectance spectroscopy of sublimating salty ice analogues. Implications for icy moons
Romain Cerubini, Antoine Pommerol, Zuri\~ne Yoldi, Nicolas Thomas

TL;DR
This study investigates the near-infrared spectral evolution of salty ice analogues, produced by different methods, to better understand the surface composition of icy moons like Europa and Ganymede, with implications for remote sensing observations.
Contribution
It introduces experimental analogues of salty ices formed by different processes and analyzes their spectral changes during sublimation, linking laboratory results to icy moon surface compositions.
Findings
Slabs formed more hydrates and highly hydrated compounds.
Sublimation removed excess water ice efficiently.
Spectral flattening indicates stable, highly hydrated salts.
Abstract
The composition of the surface of the Galilean icy moons has been debated since the Galileo mission. Several chemistries have been proposed to explain the composition of the non-icy component of the moon's surfaces, notably, sulphuric acid hydrates and magnesium and sodium sulphates. More recently, magnesium and sodium chlorides have been proposed to explain features observed in ground-based observations. We have considered four salts (NaCl, Na2SO4, MgSO4 and MgCl2) with various concentrations, to produce salty ice analogues. Granular particles were produced by a flash-freezing procedure. Additionally, compact slabs of salty ices were produced by a slow crystallisation of salty liquid solution. These two methods mimic the end-members (plumes and slow ice block formation) for producing hydrated salty ices on the surface of icy moons such as Europa and Ganymede. We have monitored the…
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