JWST Reveals Varied Origins Between Jupiter's Irregular Satellites
Benjamin N. L. Sharkey, Andrew S. Rivkin, Richard J. Cartwright, Bryan J. Holler, Joshua P. Emery, Cristina Thomas

TL;DR
This study uses JWST observations to analyze the surface compositions and origins of Jupiter's irregular satellites, revealing diverse materials and formation histories, including evidence of aqueous alteration and heterogeneity.
Contribution
First detailed spectral analysis of eight Jovian irregular satellites with JWST, uncovering diverse compositions and evidence of complex formation and alteration processes.
Findings
Detection of complexed CO₂ and unique absorption bands correlated with satellite size.
Presence of ammoniated phyllosilicates in Himalia and Elara, indicating heterogeneous parent body composition.
First identification of aqueous alteration products in the retrograde satellite swarm.
Abstract
We report observations of eight Jovian irregular satellites with JWST's NIRSpec instrument: Himalia, Elara, Pasiphae, Sinope, Lysithea, Carme, Ananke, and Themisto. Irregular satellite families, which are presumed to have formed via collisions, contain various Trojan-like and C-type-asteroid-like surfaces. We sample the three largest members of the Himalia satellite family, detecting the presence of complexed CO and a unique absorption band from whose character correlates with satellite size. The two largest irregular satellites, Himalia family members Himalia and Elara, contain ammoniated phyllosilicates that are not seen in the meteorite inventory. We propose that the Himalia parent body was heterogeneous and formed with materials similar to Ceres-like ammonium-bearing asteroids. Several small () irregular satellites closely track the colors and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation · Space Exploration and Technology
