Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
8134708 Icarus 2018 39 Pages PDF
Abstract
The ∼106 km2 Sputnik Planitia, Pluto is the upper surface of a vast basin of nitrogen ice. Cellular landforms in Sputnik Planitia with areas in the range of a few × 102-103 km2 are likely the surface manifestation of convective overturn in the nitrogen ice. The cells have sublimation pits on them, with smaller pits near their centers and larger pits near their edges. We map pits on seven cells and find that the pit radii increase by between 2.1 ± 0.4 × 10−3 and 5.9 ± 0.8 × 10−3 m m−1 away from the cell center, depending on the cell. This is a lower bound on the size increase because of the finite resolution of the data. Accounting for resolution yields upper bounds on the size vs. distance distribution of between 4.2 ± 0.2 × 10−3 and 23.4 ± 1.5 × 10−3m m−1. We then use an analytic model to calculate that pit radii grow via sublimation at a rate of 3.6−0.6+2.1×10−4 m yr−1, which allows us to convert the pit size vs. distance distribution into a pit age vs. distance distribution. This yields surface velocities between 1.5−0.2+1.0 and 6.2−1.4+3.4 cm yr−1 for the slowest cell and surface velocities between 8.1−1.0+5.5 and 17.9−5.1+8.9 cm yr−1 for the fastest cell. These convection rates imply that the surface ages at the edge of cells reach ∼4.2-8.9 × 105 yr. The rates are comparable to rates of ∼6 cm yr−1 that were previously obtained from modeling of the convective overturn in Sputnik Planitia (McKinnon et al., 2016). Finally, we investigate the surface rheology of the convection cells and estimate that the minimum ice viscosity necessary to support the geometry of the observed pits is of order 1016-1017 Pa s, based on the argument that pits would relax away before growing to their observed radii of several hundred meters if the viscosity were lower than this value.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Space and Planetary Science
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