New research suggests vast surface features on Venus
called coronae continue to be shaped by tectonic processes. Observations of
these features from NASA’s Magellan mission include, clockwise from top left,
Artemis Corona, Quetzalpetlatl Corona, Bahet Corona, and Fotla Corona.
NASA/JPL-Caltech
Using archival data from the mission, launched in 1989, researchers have
uncovered new evidence that tectonic activity may be deforming the planet’s
surface.
Vast, quasi-circular features on
Venus’ surface may reveal that the planet has ongoing tectonics, according to
new research based on data gathered more than 30 years ago by NASA’s Magellan
mission. On Earth, the planet’s surface is continually renewed by the constant
shifting and recycling of massive sections of crust, called tectonic plates,
that float atop a viscous interior. Venus doesn’t have tectonic plates, but its
surface is still being deformed by molten material from below.
Seeking to better understand the
underlying processes driving these deformations, the researchers studied a type
of feature called a corona. Ranging in size from dozens to hundreds of miles
across, a corona is most often thought to be the location where a plume of hot,
buoyant material from the planet’s mantle rises, pushing against the
lithosphere above. (The lithosphere includes the planet’s crust and the
uppermost part of its mantle.) These structures are usually oval, with a
concentric fracture system surrounding them. Hundreds of coronae are known to
exist on Venus.
Published in the journal Science
Advances, the new
study details
newly discovered signs of activity at or beneath the surface shaping many of
Venus’ coronae, features that may also provide a unique window into Earth’s
past. The researchers found the evidence of this tectonic activity within data
from NASA’s Magellan mission, which orbited Venus in the 1990s and
gathered the most detailed gravity and topography data on the planet currently
available.
“Coronae are not found on Earth today; however, they may have existed when our planet was young and before plate tectonics had been established,” said the study’s lead author, Gael Cascioli, assistant research scientist at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, and NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. “By combining gravity and topography data, this research has provided a new and important insight into the possible subsurface processes currently shaping the surface of Venus.”
This artist’s concept of the large Quetzalpetlatl
Corona located in Venus’ southern hemisphere depicts active volcanism and a
subduction zone, where the foreground crust plunges into the planet’s interior.
A new study suggests coronae are the locations of several types of tectonic
activity.
NASA/JPL-Caltech/Peter Rubin
As members of NASA’s forthcoming VERITAS (Venus Emissivity, Radio science, InSAR, Topography, and
Spectroscopy) mission, Cascioli and his team are particularly interested in the
high-resolution gravity data the spacecraft will provide. Study coauthor
Erwan Mazarico, also at Goddard, will co-lead the VERITAS gravity
experiment when the mission launches no earlier than 2031.
Mystery
Coronae
Managed by NASA’s Jet Propulsion
Laboratory in Southern California, Magellan used its radar system to see
through Venus’ thick atmosphere and map the topography of its mountains and
plains. Of the geological features the spacecraft mapped, coronae were perhaps
the most enigmatic: It wasn’t clear how they formed. In the years since,
scientists have found many coronae in locations where the planet’s lithosphere
is thin and heat flow is high.
“Coronae are abundant on Venus.
They are very large features, and people have proposed different theories over
the years as to how they formed,” said coauthor Anna Gülcher, Earth and
planetary scientist at the University of Bern in Switzerland. “The most
exciting thing for our study is that we can now say there are most likely
various and ongoing active processes driving their formation. We believe these
same processes may have occurred early in Earth’s history.”
The researchers developed
sophisticated 3D geodynamic models that demonstrate various formation scenarios
for plume-induced coronae and compared them with the combined gravity and
topography data from Magellan. The gravity data proved crucial in helping the
researchers detect less dense, hot, and buoyant plumes under the surface —
information that couldn’t be discerned from topography data alone. Of the 75
coronae studied, 52 appear to have buoyant mantle material beneath them that is
likely driving tectonic processes.
One key process is subduction: On Earth, it happens when the edge of one tectonic plate is driven beneath the adjacent plate. Friction between the plates can generate earthquakes, and as the old rocky material dives into the hot mantle, the rock melts and is recycled back to the surface via volcanic vents.
These illustrations depict various types of tectonic
activity thought to persist beneath Venus’ coronae. Lithospheric dripping and
subduction are shown at top; below are and two scenarios where hot plume
material rises and pushes against the lithosphere, potentially driving
volcanism above it.
Anna Gülcher, CC BY-NC
On Venus, a different kind of subduction is thought to occur around the
perimeter of some coronae. In this scenario, as a buoyant plume of hot rock in
the mantle pushes upward into the lithosphere, surface material rises and
spreads outward, colliding with surrounding surface material and pushing that
material downward into the mantle.
Another tectonic process known as
lithospheric dripping could also be present, where dense accumulations of
comparatively cool material sink from the lithosphere into the hot mantle. The
researchers also identify several places where a third process may be taking
place: A plume of molten rock beneath a thicker part of the lithosphere
potentially drives volcanism above it.
Deciphering
Venus
This work marks the latest instance
of scientists returning to Magellan data to find that Venus exhibits geologic
processes that are more Earth-like than originally thought. Recently,
researchers were able to spot erupting volcanoes, including vast lava flows
that vented from Maat Mons, Sif Mons, and Eistla Regio in radar images from the orbiter.
While those images provided direct
evidence of volcanic action, the authors of the new study will need sharper
resolution to draw a complete picture about the tectonic processes driving
corona formation. “The VERITAS gravity maps of Venus will boost the resolution
by at least a factor of two to four, depending on location — a level of detail
that could revolutionize our understanding of Venus’ geology and implications
for early Earth,” said study coauthor Suzanne Smrekar, a planetary scientist at
JPL and principal investigator for VERITAS.
Managed by JPL, VERITAS will use a
synthetic aperture radar to create 3D global maps and a near-infrared
spectrometer to figure out what the surface of Venus is made of. Using
its radio tracking system, the spacecraft will also measure the planet’s
gravitational field to determine the structure of Venus’ interior. All of these
instruments will help pinpoint areas of activity on the surface.
For more information about NASA’s VERITAS mission, visit: https://science.nasa.gov/mission/veritas/
Source: NASA’s Magellan Mission Reveals Possible Tectonic Activity on Venus - NASA
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