Temperature and area constraints of the south Volund volcano on Io from the NIMS and SSI instruments during the Galileo G1 orbit

被引:50
作者
Davies, AG [1 ]
McEwen, AS [1 ]
LopesGautier, RMC [1 ]
Keszthelyi, L [1 ]
Carlson, RW [1 ]
Smythe, WD [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV ARIZONA,LUNAR & PLANETARY LAB,TUCSON,AZ 85721
关键词
D O I
10.1029/97GL02310
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
Analysis of data from darkside and eclipse observations of Io by the NIMS and SSI instruments show that the South Volund hot spot is a manifestation of high temperature active silicate volcanism. The NIMS data are fitted with a two temperature model (developed from modelling terrestrial lavas) which yields a better fit to the data than a single temperature fit. The multispectral color temperatures obtained from NIMS are compared with the brightness temperatures obtained from the SSI instrument, and show excellent agreement for the hotter of the two components fitted to the NIMS data. The two components might correspond to a cooled crust which has formed on the surface of an active flow or lava lake, at a temperature of approximately 450 K, and covering an area of about 50 km(2), and a hotter and much smaller component, at a temperature of approximately 1100 K and an area of less than 0.1 km(2). The hot component implies the existence of cracks in the surface crust of a flow or lake through which the hot interior radiates, a hot vent area, or breakouts of lava forming new flow lobes. The ratio of these areas is consistent with the crack-to-crust ratio of some lava flows and lava lakes on Earth.
引用
收藏
页码:2447 / 2450
页数:4
相关论文
共 18 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 1982, SATELLITES JUPITER
[2]  
Belton MJS, 1996, SCIENCE, V274, P377, DOI 10.1126/science.274.5286.377
[3]  
BELTON MJS, 1992, SPACE SCI REV, V60, P413, DOI 10.1007/BF00216864
[4]   VOLCANIC-ERUPTIONS ON IO - HEAT-FLOW, RESURFACING, AND LAVA COMPOSITION [J].
BLANEY, DL ;
JOHNSON, TV ;
MATSON, DL ;
VEEDER, GJ .
ICARUS, 1995, 113 (01) :220-225
[5]   Near-infrared spectroscopy and spectral mapping of Jupiter and the Galilean satellites: Results from Galileo's initial orbit [J].
Carlson, R ;
Smythe, W ;
Baines, K ;
Barbinis, E ;
Becker, K ;
Burns, R ;
Calcutt, S ;
Calvin, W ;
Clark, R ;
Danielson, G ;
Davies, A ;
Drossart, P ;
Encrenaz, T ;
Fanale, F ;
Granahan, J ;
Hansen, G ;
Herrera, P ;
Hibbitts, C ;
Hui, J ;
Irwin, P ;
Johnson, T ;
Kamp, L ;
Kieffer, H ;
Leader, F ;
Lellouch, E ;
LopesGautier, R ;
Matson, D ;
McCord, T ;
Mehlman, R ;
Ocampo, A ;
Orton, G ;
RoosSerote, M ;
Segura, M ;
Shirley, J ;
Soderblom, L ;
Stevenson, A ;
Taylor, F ;
Torson, J ;
Weir, A ;
Weissman, P .
SCIENCE, 1996, 274 (5286) :385-388
[6]  
CARLSON RW, 1992, SPACE SCI REV, V60, P457, DOI 10.1007/BF00216865
[7]   SILICATE VOLCANISM ON IO [J].
CARR, MH .
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-SOLID EARTH AND PLANETS, 1986, 91 (B3) :3521-3532
[8]   A MODEL FOR LAVA FLOWS WITH 2 THERMAL COMPONENTS [J].
CRISP, J ;
BALOGA, S .
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-SOLID EARTH AND PLANETS, 1990, 95 (B2) :1255-1270
[9]   Io's volcanism: Thermo-physical models of silicate lava compared with observations of thermal emission [J].
Davies, AG .
ICARUS, 1996, 124 (01) :45-61
[10]   COOLING RATE OF AN ACTIVE HAWAIIAN LAVA FLOW FROM NIGHTTIME SPECTRORADIOMETER MEASUREMENTS [J].
FLYNN, LP ;
MOUGINISMARK, PJ .
GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 1992, 19 (17) :1783-1786