Aug 1979
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1979natur.280..750s&link_type=abstract
Nature, vol. 280, Aug. 30, 1979, p. 750-753. NASA-supported research.
Physics
34
Color, Io, Melting Points, Sulfur, Surface Reactions, Chromosphere, Liquefied Gases, Liquid-Vapor Equilibrium, Mass Flow Rate, Planetology, Quenching (Cooling), Viscosity, Volcanology, Voyager Project
Scientific paper
Flows of liquid sulfur are discussed as the sources of the variegated color patterns observed on Io. The variation of the viscosity of liquid sulfur as it cools from black to red to orange to yellow are shown to explain the black and red-black colors of the calderas, where molten sulfur reaches the surface, the red sinuous deposits presumably formed by high-viscosity laminar flows, and the yellow and orange-yellow plains, a product of rapid, turbulent flows. The sulfur allotropes responsible for these colors are preserved in the rapid quenching of molten sulfur, with a characteristic decay time under Ionian conditions estimated to be greater than the lifetime of Io. Observations of an atmospheric pressure of 10 to the -6th bar indicate that only a small fraction of Io is molten at any one time, however the entire surface is renewed in color and albedo by sulfur flows every thousand years.
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