Measurement of D/H and 13C/12C Ratios in Methane Ice on Eris and Makemake: Evidence for Internal Activity
W.M. Grundy, I. Wong, C.R. Glein, S. Protopapa, B.J. Holler, J.C., Cook, J.A. Stansberry, A.H. Parker, J.I. Lunine, N. Pinilla-Alonso, A.C. de, Souza Feliciano, R. Brunetto, J.P. Emery, and J. Licandro

TL;DR
This study uses JWST spectrometry to measure isotopic ratios in methane ice on Eris and Makemake, revealing insights into their internal activity and geochemical history.
Contribution
First detection of heavy methane isotopologues on Eris and Makemake, providing new data on their surface composition and internal processes.
Findings
Measured D/H ratios are lower than primordial methane in comets.
13C/12C ratios are consistent with solar system values.
Evidence suggests internal activity and geochemical processes.
Abstract
James Webb Space Telescope's NIRSpec infrared imaging spectrometer observed the outer solar system dwarf planets Eris and Makemake in reflected sunlight at wavelengths spanning 1 through 5 microns. Both objects have high albedo surfaces that are rich in methane ice, with a texture that permits long optical path lengths through the ice for solar photons. There is evidence for N2 ice absorption around 4.2 um on Eris, though not on Makemake. No CO ice absorption is seen at 4.67 um on either body. For the first time, absorption bands of two heavy isotopologues of methane are observed at 2.615 um (13CH4), 4.33 um (12CH3D), and 4.57 um (12CH3D). These bands enable us to measure D/H ratios of (2.5 +/- 0.5) x 10-4 and (2.9 +/- 0.6) x 10-4, along with 13C/12C ratios of 0.012 +/- 0.002 and 0.010 +/- 0.003 in the surface methane ices of Eris and Makemake, respectively. The measured D/H ratios are…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Atmospheric Ozone and Climate · Isotope Analysis in Ecology
