NASA-supported scientists have developed a new method to compute how tides affect the interiors of planets and moons. Importantly, the new study looks at the effects of body tides on objects that don't have a perfectly spherical interior structure, which is an assumption of most previous models.
The puzzling, fascinating surface of Jupiter's icy
moon Europa looms large in this newly-reprocessed color view, made from images
taken by NASA's Galileo spacecraft in the late 1990s. This is the color view of
Europa from Galileo that shows the largest portion of the moon's surface at the
highest resolution.
NASA/JPL-Caltech/SETI Institute
Body tides refer to the
deformations experienced by celestial bodies when they gravitationally interact
with other objects. Think of how the powerful gravity of Jupiter tugs on its
moon Europa. Because Europa's orbit isn't circular, the crushing squeeze of
Jupiter's gravity on the moon varies as it travels along its orbit. When
Europa is at its closest to Jupiter, the planet's gravity is felt the most. The
energy of this deformation is what heats up Europa's interior, allowing an
ocean of liquid water to exist beneath the moon's icy surface.
"The same is true for Saturn's
moon Enceladus." says co-author Alexander Berne of CalTech in Pasadena and
an affiliate at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California.
"Enceladus has an ice shell that is expected to be much more
non-spherically symmetric than that of Europa."
The body tides experienced by
celestial bodies can affect how the worlds evolve over time and, in cases like
Europa and Enceladus, their potential habitability for life as we know it. The
new study provides a means to more accurately estimate how tidal forces affect
planetary interiors.
In this movie Europa is seen in a cutaway view through
two cycles of its 3.5 day orbit about the giant planet Jupiter. Like Earth,
Europa is thought to have an iron core, a rocky mantle and a surface ocean of
salty water. Unlike on Earth, however, this ocean is deep enough to cover the
whole moon, and being far from the sun, the ocean surface is globally frozen
over. Europa's orbit is eccentric, which means as it travels around Jupiter,
large tides, raised by Jupiter, rise and fall. Jupiter's position relative to
Europa is also seen to librate, or wobble, with the same period. This tidal
kneading causes frictional heating within Europa, much in the same way a paper
clip bent back and forth can get hot to the touch, as illustrated by the red
glow in the interior of Europa's rocky mantle and in the lower, warmer part of
its ice shell. This tidal heating is what keeps Europa's ocean liquid and could
prove critical to the survival of simple organisms within the ocean, if they
exist. The giant planet Jupiter is now shown to be rotating from west to east,
though more slowly than its actual rate.
NASA/JPL-Caltech
The paper also discusses how the
results of the study could help scientists interpret observations made by
missions to a variety of different worlds, ranging from Mercury to the Moon to
the outer planets of our solar system.
The study, "A Spectral Method to Compute the Tides of Laterally Heterogeneous Bodies," was published in The Planetary Science Journal.
By: Aaron Gronstal
Source: NASA-Funded Study Examines Tidal Effects on Planet and Moon Interiors - NASA Science
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