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Cracks
on Enceladus Open and Close Under Saturn's Pull
05/16/07
Enceladus
the Storyteller
For
Hi-Res and complete caption
Credit:
NASA
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Cracks in the
icy surface of Saturn's moon Enceladus open and close daily under
the pull of Saturn's gravity, according to new calculations by
NASA-sponsored researchers.
"Tides generated by
Saturn's gravity could control the timing of eruptions from
cracks in the southern hemisphere of Enceladus," said Dr.
Terry Hurford of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt,
Md. Hurford is lead author of a paper on this research appearing
in Nature May 17. This paper is one of two studies on Enceladus
in this issue of Nature. The other paper explains that tidal
forces cause the sides of the cracks to rub together and produce
enough heat to vaporize ice into plumes that jettison off the
moon, researchers suggest.
In 2005, the
Cassini spacecraft flew by Enceladus and saw plumes of material
erupting from the south pole of Enceladus. Scientists were
surprised to see this because eruptions are powered by heat from
an object's interior. Enceladus is tiny compared to most moons,
only about 500 kilometers (310 miles) in diameter, so it should
have lost its interior heat to the cold of space long ago.
A
closer look by Cassini revealed a series of 120-kilometer
(75-mile) long cracks in the south polar region of Enceladus,
which were nicknamed "Tiger Stripes" because they
resembled a tiger's distinctive marks. The stripes are warmer
than their surroundings, so scientists believe they are the
source of the eruptions. The Cassini observations also show the
plumes consist of water vapor, so there is evidence for liquid
water under the ice. Since liquid water is necessary to support
known forms of life, Enceladus has become a promising place to
look for extraterrestrial life.
Enceladus' 1.3-Earth-day
orbit around Saturn is slightly elliptical (egg-shaped), so the
moon's distance from Saturn changes regularly as it travels in
its orbit. When Enceladus is closer to Saturn, the pull of
Saturn's gravity is stronger, creating a larger tide; and when
Enceladus is farther away, the pull is weaker, creating a smaller
tide. Saturn's position in Enceladus' sky also changes slightly,
moving the location of the tide on Enceladus' surface from east
to west and back again with each orbit. These two effects combine
to produce changing stress on the moon's icy surface. The team
developed a computer model to calculate how the changing stress
affects the Tiger Stripes.
"We found that because of
the way the Tiger Stripes are oriented on the surface, when
Enceladus is farthest from Saturn, the stresses in the region
pull most of them open, and when Enceladus is closest to Saturn,
the stresses force most of them to close," said Hurford.
"Different stripes open at different times in the orbit.
Assuming they erupt as soon as they open, exposing liquid water
to the vacuum of space, we can predict which stripes will be
erupting at certain times in the orbit. Also, because most of the
stripes are open when Enceladus is farthest from Saturn, we
expect the eruptive activity to be greatest at this time."
It has been hard to conclusively test the model so far
because of the orientation of the stripes when Cassini took
images of the eruptions. Cassini saw the eruptions when they
appeared on the edge of Enceladus as they were backlit by the
sun. From this viewpoint, the Tiger Stripes were lined up so that
some were closer to the spacecraft and some were farther away. It
is hard for the team to tell if an eruption was coming from a
stripe in the foreground or from one in the background. However,
future observations of the moon when Cassini is in a different
location may provide a partial test by allowing the eruptions
from one stripe to appear distinct from the rest.
The
research was funded through NASA's Postdoctoral Program
Fellowship. The team includes Hurford, Dr. Paul Helfenstein of
Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y., Dr. Greg Hoppa of Raytheon,
Woburn, Mass., Dr. Richard Greenberg of the University of
Arizona, Tucson, and Dr. Bruce Bills of the Scripps Institution
of Oceanography, La Jolla, Calif., and Goddard. The
Cassini-Huygens mission is a cooperative project among NASA, the
European Space Agency, and the Italian Space Agency. JPL, a
division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena,
manages the Cassini-Huygens mission for NASA's Science Mission
Directorate, Washington. The Cassini orbiter was designed,
developed, and assembled at JPL.
Source:
NASA / JPL

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