Modeling the Jovian subnebula: II - Composition of regular satellites ices
Olivier Mousis, Yann Alibert

TL;DR
This study models the composition of ices in Jupiter's regular satellites by analyzing volatile trapping and vaporization processes in the subnebula, providing insights into their formation and surface compositions.
Contribution
It introduces two formation scenarios for icy satellites and examines the chemical evolution of volatiles within Jupiter's subnebula, enhancing understanding of satellite compositions.
Findings
Ices in early-formed planetesimals vaporized before accretion.
The second scenario's chemistry inhibits N2 to NH3 and CO to CH4 conversions.
Results align with observed CO2 on Callisto and Ganymede surfaces.
Abstract
We use the evolutionary turbulent model of Jupiter's subnebula described by Alibert et al. (2005a) to constrain the composition of ices incorporated in its regular icy satellites. We consider CO2, CO, CH4, N2, NH3, H2S, Ar, Kr, and Xe as the major volatile species existing in the gas-phase of the solar nebula. All these volatile species, except CO2 which crystallized as a pure condensate, are assumed to be trapped by H2O to form hydrates or clathrate hydrates in the solar nebula. Once condensed, these ices were incorporated into the growing planetesimals produced in the feeding zone of proto-Jupiter. Some of these solids then flowed from the solar nebula to the subnebula, and may have been accreted by the forming Jovian regular satellites. We show that ices embedded in solids entering at early epochs into the Jovian subdisk were all vaporized. This leads us to consider two different…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science
