Linking Enceladus’ plume characteristics to the crevasse properties

Nick J. van der Hijden, Fabrizio Giordano, Sebastian O. Oliver Scholts, Stavros Sklavenitis, Tara Marie Bründl, Yaël R.A. Bourgeois, Ferry F.J. Schrijer, Stéphanie M. Cazaux*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

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Abstract

Supersonic plumes of water vapour and icy particles have been observed by the Cassini spacecraft during several flybys over Enceladus. These plumes originate from the Tiger Stripes located in the South Polar Terrain (SPT), and indicate the presence of a subsurface ocean under the icy crust which is salty and contains complex organic molecules. Other characteristics of the plumes, such as the vent temperature, mass flow rate, velocity and mass fraction of icy particles can be used to determine the conditions in the channel, linking the subsurface ocean to the icy surface. In this paper, we developed a fluid dynamics model that accounts for nucleation, particle growth, wall accretion and sublimation. The channel behaves similarly to a converging–diverging nozzle, which forms supersonic plumes due to a pressure difference between the reservoir where the subsurface ocean is located and the exosphere. The geometry of the channel and its evolution with accretion of gas and sublimation of ice are studied to reproduce the characteristics of the plumes observed by Cassini. We first performed a parameter study on the channel geometry to determine how it influences the plumes’ velocity, solid fraction and exit temperature. Our results show that the size of the icy particles is primarily dependent on the length of the channel, indicating that large particles (∼75μm) must originate from within a kilometer below the surface, while smaller particles (∼3μm) can originate from only hundreds of meters below the surface. We further show that the velocity of the flow, exit temperature and nucleation depend directly on the exit-to-throat size ratio. We find that the channel geometry evolves within a few tens of hours until an equilibrium is reached, when considering the accretion of gas to the walls, or sublimation of ice from the walls. As the channel closes due to accretion, the flow becomes thinner, which in turn reduces accretion. After around 70 h, the accretion is sufficiently slowed such that the geometry does not evolve anymore. This equilibrium geometry produces higher Mach numbers and a larger particle size and solid fraction compared to the initial geometry.

Original languageEnglish
Article number116114
Number of pages12
JournalIcarus
Volume417
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Keywords

  • Accretion
  • Crevasse
  • Enceladus
  • Nucleation
  • Particle growth
  • Particle size
  • Plumes
  • Reservoir conditions
  • Solid fraction
  • Sublimation

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