Water‐Ice Dominated Spectra of Saturn's Rings and Small Moons From JWST

Author:

Hedman M. M.1ORCID,Tiscareno M. S.2ORCID,Showalter M. R.2ORCID,Fletcher L. N.3ORCID,King O. R. T.3ORCID,Harkett J.3ORCID,Roman M. T.3ORCID,Rowe‐Gurney N.4,Hammel H. B.5,Milam S. N.6ORCID,El Moutamid M.7ORCID,Cartwright R. J.2,de Pater I.89ORCID,Molter E. M.9ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physics University of Idaho Moscow ID USA

2. SETI Institute Mountain View CA USA

3. School of Physics and Astronomy University of Leicester Leicester UK

4. Royal Astronomical Society London UK

5. Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy Washington DC USA

6. Astrochemistry Laboratory Code 691 NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt MD USA

7. Carl Sagan Institute Cornell University Ithaca NY USA

8. Department of Astronomy University of California Berkeley Berkeley CA USA

9. Department of Earth and Planetary Science University of California Berkeley Berkeley CA USA

Abstract

AbstractJWST measured the infrared spectra of Saturn's rings and several of its small moons (Epimetheus, Pandora, Telesto, and Pallene) as part of Guaranteed Time Observation program 1247. The NIRSpec instrument obtained near‐infrared spectra of the small moons between 0.6 and 5.3 microns, which are all dominated by water‐ice absorption bands. The shapes of the water‐ice bands for these moons suggests that their surfaces contain variable mixes of crystalline and amorphous ice or variable amounts of contaminants and/or sub‐micron ice grains. The near‐infrared spectrum of Saturn's A ring has exceptionally high signal‐to‐noise between 2.7 and 5 microns and is dominated by features due to highly crystalline water ice. The ring spectrum also confirms that the rings possess a 2%–3% deep absorption at 4.13 microns due to deuterated water ice previously seen by the Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer onboard the Cassini spacecraft. This spectrum also constrains the fundamental absorption bands of carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide and may contain evidence for a weak aliphatic hydrocarbon band. Meanwhile, the MIRI instrument obtained mid‐infrared spectra of the rings between 4.9 and 27.9 microns, where the observed signal is a combination of reflected sunlight and thermal emission. This region shows a strong reflectance peak centered around 9.3 microns that can be attributed to crystalline water ice. Since both the near and mid‐infrared spectra are dominated by highly crystalline water ice, they should provide a useful baseline for interpreting the spectra of other objects in the outer solar system with more complex compositions.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Cited by 2 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Infrared emissivity of icy surfaces;Astronomy & Astrophysics;2024-07-29

2. JWST Spectrophotometry of the Small Satellites of Uranus and Neptune;The Planetary Science Journal;2024-05-01

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