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Prospects for measuring Mercury's tidal Love number h2 with the BepiColombo Laser Altimeter

Authors :
Robin Thor
Reinald Kallenbach
Jürgen Oberst
Gregor Steinbrügge
A. Di Ruscio
Paolo Cappuccio
Luciano Iess
Alexander Stark
Ulrich R. Christensen
H. Hussmann
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Context.The Love numberh2describes the radial tidal displacements of Mercury’s surface and allows constraints to be set on the inner core size when combined with the potential Love numberk2. Knowledge of Mercury’s inner core size is fundamental to gaining insights into the planet’s thermal evolution and dynamo working principle. The BepiColombo Laser Altimeter (BELA) is currently cruising to Mercury as part of the BepiColombo mission and once it is in orbit around Mercury, it will acquire precise measurements of the planet’s surface topography, potentially including variability that is due to tidal deformation.Aims.We use synthetic measurements acquired using BELA to assess how accurately Mercury’s tidal Love numberh2can be determined by laser altimetry.Methods.We generated realistic, synthetic BELA measurements, including instrument performance, orbit determination, as well as uncertainties in spacecraft attitude and Mercury’s libration. We then retrieved Mercury’sh2and global topography from the synthetic data through a joint inversion.Results.Our results suggest thath2can be determined with an absolute accuracy of ± 0.012, enabling a determination of Mercury’s inner core size to ± 150 km given the inner core is sufficiently large (>800 km). We also show that the uncertainty ofh2depends strongly on the assumed scaling behavior of the topography at small scales and on the periodic misalignment of the instrument.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bee573e729f43717db5031f9ad9f4a7c