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Feasibility of Passive Sounding of Uranian Moons Using Uranian Kilometric Radiation.

Authors :
Romero‐Wolf, A.
Steinbrügge, G.
Castillo‐Rogez, J.
Cochrane, C. J.
Nordheim, T. A.
Mitchell, K. L.
Wolfenbarger, N. S.
Schroeder, D. M.
Peters, S.
Source :
Earth & Space Science. Feb2024, Vol. 11 Issue 2, p1-19. 19p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

We present a feasibility study for passive sounding of Uranian icy moons using Uranian Kilometric Radio (UKR) emissions in the 100–900 kHz band. We provide a summary description of the observation geometry, the UKR characteristics, and estimate the sensitivity for an instrument analogous to the Cassini Radio Plasma Wave Science (RPWS) but with a modified receiver digitizer and signal processing chain. We show that the concept has the potential to directly and unambiguously detect cold oceans within Uranian satellites and provide strong constraints on the interior structure in the presence of warm or no oceans. As part of a geophysical payload, the concept could therefore have a key role in the detection of oceans within the Uranian satellites. The main limitation of the concept is coherence losses attributed to the extended source size of the UKR and dependence on the illumination geometry. These factors represent constraints on the tour design of a future Uranus mission in terms of flyby altitudes and encounter timing. Plain Language Summary: The large moons of Uranus are hypothesized to have subsurface oceans beneath their icy crusts. This paper analyzes the possibility to use natural radio emissions originating from Uranian auroras to probe for these oceans. Cold ice is transparent to radio waves allowing reflections from liquid water to be readily observed. Monitoring the radio noise patterns from Uranus and searching for the reflections could constitute a direct way to detect the subsurface oceans. Key Points: Passive Sounding of the Uranian moons is a promising concept and no insurmountable obstacles have been identifiedIn the presence of NH3 rich oceans, the direct detection of the ice‐ocean interface is feasibleThe method works best for the outer moons and low ocean temperatures, making it complementary to magnetic induction measurements [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23335084
Volume :
11
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Earth & Space Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
175671068
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1029/2023EA003013