ADD ANI AS A TRUSTED SOURCE
googleads
ANI Logo
Menu
Space

Large shift on Europa was last event to fracture its surface

Texas [USA], August 21 (ANI): Europa's outer icy shell has completely reoriented itself in one of the last geologic events recorded on its young surface. Europa's poles are not where they used to be. Cracks in the surface of Jupiter's icy moon indicate its shell of ice rotated by 70 degrees sometime in the last several million years.

ANI Aug 21, 2020 21:21 IST googleads

Perspective views of fractures on the surface of Europa formed during true polar wander (Image credits: P. Schenk/USRA-LPI)

Texas [USA], August 21 (ANI): Europa's outer icy shell has completely reoriented itself in one of the last geologic events recorded on its young surface. Europa's poles are not where they used to be. Cracks in the surface of Jupiter's icy moon indicate its shell of ice rotated by 70 degrees sometime in the last several million years.
In addition to supporting prior evidence for the existence of a subsurface ocean, it also means that the geologic history of Europa's surface must be reexamined.
New research, led by Universities Space Research Association's Senior Staff Scientist Dr. Paul Schenk at the Lunar and Planetary Institute (LPI), confirms that Europa's large global scale circular patterns formed during a large reorientation of its icy outer shell with respect to its spin axis, a process known as true polar wander.
This can only happen if the icy shell is uncoupled, or floating free, separated from the rocky core of the planet by a liquid water ocean. The findings were published on July 29, 2020, in Geophysical Research Letters.
"Our key finding is that the fractures associated with a true polar wander on Europa cross-cut all terrains. This means that the true polar wander event is very young and that the ice shell and all features formed on it have moved more than 70° of latitude from where they first formed. If true, then the entire recorded history of tectonics on Europa should be reevaluated," reported Dr Schenk.
Using a combination of global maps from Galileo and Voyager data with improved precision, and detailed topographic data derived from them, a team of scientists from the LPI in Houston, the University of California at Santa Cruz, and the University of Arizona in Tucson have correlated large fractures on the surface of Europa with previously identified concentric circular depressions on the surface.
NASA's Galileo spacecraft orbited Jupiter from 1995 to 2003 and returned hundreds of images of Europa's surface. Reconstruction of the global map of Europa at 200-meter resolution in colour in preparation for a return to Europa revealed that these mysterious fracture systems were part of the circular true polar wander patterns identified previously.
Topographic mapping in the highest resolution images of the fractures at 40 meters per pixel shows that the fractures are more than 200 meters deep. The fractures cut through all known terrains and thus show that the deformation related to the global reorientation (or true polar wander) event was one of the last events to occur on Europa. These features also imply that the floating ice shell on Europa may have thickened over time.
"Another important aspect of this work is that it makes predictions for additional features and ice shell properties which can be tested when the planned Europa Clipper spacecraft starts observing Europa," said coinvestigator Francis Nimmo at the University of California at Santa Cruz.
"In addition to generating global-scale tectonic features, true polar wander also produces global-scale gravity and shape perturbations, which affects gravity and shape constraints on the interior structure," said coinvestigator Isamu Matsuyama at the University of Arizona.
These too can be searched for and tested when Europa Clipper arrives later in this decade. Europa Clipper will complete the map of Europa, including high-resolution images and soundings of these features. These maps will help determine the absolute age of these fractures and depressions and other consequences of the polar wander event that created them. (ANI)

Get the App

What to Read Next

Science

Study finds way to produce high-purity boron nitride nanotubes

Study finds way to produce high-purity boron nitride nanotubes

Rice University researchers have developed a new method for producing high-purity boron nitride nanotubes. These hollow cylindrical structures can withstand temperatures up to 900 degrees Celsius (~1652 Fahrenheit) and are stronger than steel by weight.

Read More
Science

Study reveals why family businesses have more women leaders

Study reveals why family businesses have more women leaders

Family firms account for more than 70% of worldwide GDP, and poll statistics reveal that they are significantly more accepting of female leadership: up to 55% have at least one woman on their board, and 70% are considering a woman as their next CEO. Experts attribute the outlier gender parity to a focus on long-term plans or family values.

Read More
Science

Study finds ways to remove boron nitride nanotubes impurities

Study finds ways to remove boron nitride nanotubes impurities

Scientists in the lab of Angel Marti have identified a novel approach to create high-purity boron nitride nanotubes, hollow cylindrical structures that can endure temperatures of up to 900 degrees Celsius (~1652 Fahrenheit) while also being stronger than steel by weight.

Read More
Science

How important protein helps keep cell membranes in balance

How important protein helps keep cell membranes in balance

Lipids are the primary components of our cell membranes, which are made up of lipid bilayers. The lipid distribution is not uniform; it is asymmetric, having differing lipid contents in the outer and inner layers.

Read More
Science

Returning home for vacations may help bilingual children

Returning home for vacations may help bilingual children

It is difficult to keep a language alive in the family. Many people who relocate to new nations discover that their native language has become a heritage language, passed down to subsequent generations with variable degrees of success.

Read More
Science

Electrons from Earth may be producing water on Moon: Study

Electrons from Earth may be producing water on Moon: Study

Scientists determined that high energy electrons in Earth's plasma sheet are contributing to weathering processes on the Moon's surface and may have contributed to the development of water on the lunar surface.

Read More
Science

Earth's electrons may be forming water on Moon: Study

Earth's electrons may be forming water on Moon: Study

A team of researchers discovered that high energy electrons in Earth's plasma sheet are contributing to weathering processes on the Moon's surface and that the electrons may have aided in the formation of water on the lunar surface.

Read More
Science

Heatwaves are getting more deadly and frequent

Heatwaves are getting more deadly and frequent

The old, the ill, and the poor are especially vulnerable to the devastating effects of heatwaves like the one we are presently experiencing. One of the deadliest natural disasters in recent memory, the 2003 heatwave that saw temperatures in Europe exceed 47.5 degrees Celsius claimed between 45,000 and 70,000 lives in a few weeks. The emergency rooms in the cities were overflowing, the forests burnt, and the harvests in the fields perished. Around 13 billion dollars worth of costs were incurred globally. However, compared to other climate-related events, the public continues to be less informed about the dangers of heat waves. According to a study that was written in the journal Nature Communications, this is an issue. Heatwaves similar to the one we experienced in 2003 might become the new standard in the coming years.

Read More
Science

New research method helps to determine health impacts of heat

New research method helps to determine health impacts of heat

They discovered that even moderate temperature increases, for example, night-time temperatures starting at 18.4 degrees Celsius, can lead to increased hospital visits and death for older adults and those with cardiorespiratory conditions.

Read More
Science

Study shows how ear can inform brain whether hearing is impaired

Study shows how ear can inform brain whether hearing is impaired

A cochlear signal, whose exact purpose has been unknown since its discovery roughly 70 years ago, most likely informs the brain about whether the ear is functioning normally or not. This is the finding of a study conducted by Linkoping University in Sweden. Its findings are a key piece of the puzzle in describing what happens in the ear in hearing impairment caused by damaging noise and may help in the long run in detecting noise-induced hearing injury.

Read More
Home About Us Our Products Advertise Contact Us Terms & Condition Privacy Policy

Copyright © aninews.in | All Rights Reserved.