Global Modelling of Ganymede's Surface Composition: Near-IR Mapping from VLT/SPHERE
Oliver King, Leigh N. Fletcher

TL;DR
This study provides high-resolution near-infrared maps of Ganymede's surface composition, revealing spatial variations in water ice, salts, and acids, and offering insights into surface processes and potential compositional origins.
Contribution
It introduces a novel application of ground-based VLT/SPHERE observations combined with MCMC modelling to map Ganymede's surface composition at high spatial resolution.
Findings
Water ice dominates young bright terrains.
Ice grain size varies with latitude and longitude.
Low-abundance salts show potential correlations with plasma bombardment.
Abstract
We present maps of Ganymede's surface composition with almost complete longitude coverage, acquired using high spatial resolution near-infrared (0.95 to 1.65) observations from the ground-based VLT/SPHERE instrument. Observed reflectance spectra were modelled using a Markov Chain Monte Carlo method to estimate abundances and associated uncertainties of water ices, acids, salts and a spectrally-flat darkening agent. Results confirm Ganymede's surface is dominated by water ice in young bright terrain (impact craters, sulci), and low-albedo spectrally-flat material in older dark terrain (e.g. Galileo Regio). Ice grain size has strong latitudinal and longitudinal gradients, with larger grains at the equator and on the trailing hemisphere. These trends are consistent with the effects of the latitudinal thermal gradient and global variations in radiation driven sputtering. Sulphuric…
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