A new sampling system tailored to experimentally-derived mechanical properties of icy analogs for evolved Enceladus surface plume deposits

Enceladus is unique amongst Ocean Worlds in our Solar System: the contents of its internal ocean are continuously emitted to space by its present-day activity, and some of these materials are redeposited on the surface. This tiny moon of Saturn thus presents an opportunity to directly measure the co...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Robert Hodyss, Mathieu Choukroun, Paul Backes, Mircea Badescu, Eloise Marteau, Jamie Molaro, Scott Moreland, Eli Phelps, Dario Riccobono
Other Authors: Hodyss, Robert, Choukroun, Mathieu, Backes, Paul, Badescu, Mircea, Marteau, Eloise, Molaro, Jamie, Moreland, Scott, Phelps, Eli, Riccobono, Dario
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: American Geophysical Union (AGU) 2019
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11583/2837208
Description
Summary:Enceladus is unique amongst Ocean Worlds in our Solar System: the contents of its internal ocean are continuously emitted to space by its present-day activity, and some of these materials are redeposited on the surface. This tiny moon of Saturn thus presents an opportunity to directly measure the composition of the ocean and seek evidence for habitability (including past or extant life), either by collecting and analyzing plume particles as previously proposed by Discovery and New Frontiers mission concepts, or via more ambitious mission concepts that involve landing, surface sampling and analysis, and potential deployment of subsurface probes to reach the ocean itself (Hofgartner et al., this meeting). However, the low surface gravity (1% of Earth’s) and extreme cryogenic conditions in the South Pole regions (~ 50 K, away from the Tiger Stripes) raises questions: how to best sample the upper ~ 1 cm of the surface around a lander, made of most freshly deposited plume materials? What are the expected properties of these materials, i.e. how fast does sintering proceed and how strong would these materials be as function of their exposure age? We provide answers to these questions via a two-pronged approach. First, we surveyed experimentally the time evolution of mechanical strength of large samples of ice spherules at several temperatures. A custom sample preparation system has been developed to synthesize ice spheres with a grain size distribution of mean ~ 12 microns. The samples are subsequently held at temperatures of -30, -50, and -80 C, over extended periods of time (up to 9 months at time of writing), and their strength is tested at frequent intervals using cone penetration tests. The data obtained to date suggests that the observed temperature dependence of the strength evolution is commensurate with expectations from vapor diffusion. Second, we developed a new sampling system that enables rapid sampling and transfer of surface materials into receptacles. Those receptacles can then deposit the sampled ...