A patchy CO$_2$ exosphere on Ganymede revealed by the James Webb Space Telescope
Dominique Bockel\'ee-Morvan (1), Olivier Poch (2), Fran\c{c}cois, Leblanc (3), Vladimir Zakharov (1), Emmanuel Lellouch (1), Eric Quirico (2),, Imke de Pater (4,5), Thierry Fouchet (1), Pablo Rodriguez-Ovalle (1), Lorenz, Roth (6), Fr\'ed\'eric Merlin (1), Stefan Duling (7)

TL;DR
This study uses JWST observations to reveal the distribution and potential mechanisms of CO₂ in Ganymede's exosphere, highlighting complex surface-atmosphere interactions influenced by terrain and irradiation.
Contribution
First detection and spatial analysis of Ganymede's CO₂ exosphere using JWST, exploring its distribution, possible sources, and surface interactions.
Findings
CO₂ detected mainly over irradiated terrains and polar regions.
Highest CO₂ abundance found over the north polar cap, reaching 1 pbar.
Cold traps likely facilitate CO₂ adsorption and redistribution.
Abstract
Jupiter's icy moon Ganymede has a tenuous exosphere produced by sputtering and possibly sublimation of water ice. To date, only atomic hydrogen and oxygen have been directly detected in this exosphere. Here, we present observations of Ganymede's CO exosphere obtained with the James Webb Space Telescope. CO gas is observed over different terrain types, mainly over those exposed to intense Jovian plasma irradiation, as well as over some bright or dark terrains. Despite warm surface temperatures, the CO abundance over equatorial subsolar regions is low. CO vapor has the highest abundance over the north polar cap of the leading hemisphere, reaching a surface pressure of 1 pbar. From modeling we show that the local enhancement observed near 12 h local time in this region can be explained by the presence of cold traps enabling CO adsorption. However, whether the release…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
