Literature DB >> 29345986

Vital Signs: Seismology of Icy Ocean Worlds.

Steven D Vance1, Sharon Kedar1, Mark P Panning1, Simon C Stähler2,3, Bruce G Bills1, Ralph D Lorenz4, Hsin-Hua Huang5,6, W T Pike7, Julie C Castillo1, Philippe Lognonné8, Victor C Tsai6, Alyssa R Rhoden9.   

Abstract

Ice-covered ocean worlds possess diverse energy sources and associated mechanisms that are capable of driving significant seismic activity, but to date no measurements of their seismic activity have been obtained. Such investigations could reveal the transport properties and radial structures, with possibilities for locating and characterizing trapped liquids that may host life and yielding critical constraints on redox fluxes and thus on habitability. Modeling efforts have examined seismic sources from tectonic fracturing and impacts. Here, we describe other possible seismic sources, their associations with science questions constraining habitability, and the feasibility of implementing such investigations. We argue, by analogy with the Moon, that detectable seismic activity should occur frequently on tidally flexed ocean worlds. Their ices fracture more easily than rocks and dissipate more tidal energy than the <1 GW of the Moon and Mars. Icy ocean worlds also should create less thermal noise due to their greater distance and consequently smaller diurnal temperature variations. They also lack substantial atmospheres (except in the case of Titan) that would create additional noise. Thus, seismic experiments could be less complex and less susceptible to noise than prior or planned planetary seismology investigations of the Moon or Mars. Key Words: Seismology-Redox-Ocean worlds-Europa-Ice-Hydrothermal. Astrobiology 18, 37-53.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 29345986     DOI: 10.1089/ast.2016.1612

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Astrobiology        ISSN: 1557-8070            Impact factor:   4.335


  2 in total

1.  Science Objectives for Flagship-Class Mission Concepts for the Search for Evidence of Life at Enceladus.

Authors:  Shannon M MacKenzie; Marc Neveu; Alfonso F Davila; Jonathan I Lunine; Morgan L Cable; Charity M Phillips-Lander; Jennifer L Eigenbrode; J Hunter Waite; Kate L Craft; Jason D Hofgartner; Chris P McKay; Christopher R Glein; Dana Burton; Samuel P Kounaves; Richard A Mathies; Steven D Vance; Michael J Malaska; Robert Gold; Christopher R German; Krista M Soderlund; Peter Willis; Caroline Freissinet; Alfred S McEwen; John Robert Brucato; Jean-Pierre P de Vera; Tori M Hoehler; Jennifer Heldmann
Journal:  Astrobiology       Date:  2022-03-15       Impact factor: 4.045

2.  Seismicity on tidally active solid-surface worlds.

Authors:  T A Hurford; W G Henning; R Maguire; V Lekic; N Schmerr; M Panning; V J Bray; M Manga; S A Kattenhorn; L C Quick; A R Rhoden
Journal:  Icarus       Date:  2020-03-01       Impact factor: 3.508

  2 in total

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