Physics
Scientific paper
Jul 2001
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=2001jgr...10614595f&link_type=abstract
Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 106, Issue E7, p. 14595-14600
Physics
22
Planetology: Solid Surface Planets
Scientific paper
We have conducted a series of experiments designed to simulate, in the laboratory, the development of any subsurface aqueous phase on Europa. In our theoretical-experimental approach we select a single natural sample (a CM meteorite) that based on cosmochemical considerations, we consider to approximately represent the bulk material that accreted to form Europa. We then subject the sample to a hot water leaching procedure designed to simulate low- to moderate-temperature aqueous alteration. The resulting leach solution was then subjected to a series of sequential fractional crystallization steps producing a series of ices and residual brines. Then all this brines and ices are multiply analyzed for Na, Ca, Mg, Sr, Ba, Fe, Mn, K, Cl, and SO4. Results were found to be remarkably consistent between brines and ices in the same stages of crystallization and also between stages. We found that any putative aqueous phase below Europa's ice crust is probably a brine with cations: Na~Mg>Ca, K>Fe and anions: SO4>>Cl. Our results are in harmony with inferences drawn from one of the two main current interpretations of the orbital spectral data but cannot definitively rule out inferences drawn from the alternative interpretation. This is so because the mineralogy of the top 200 μm may not reflect the chemical composition of bodies of brine below the solid surface owing to extensive alteration caused by magnetospheric bombardment.
de Carlo E.
Fanale Fraser P.
Farley C.
Granahan James C.
Horton Keith
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