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Tectonics of Io By Dave Parmelee 4/21/05
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Tectonics of Io By Dave Parmelee 4/21/05. Io Statistics 3 rd largest moon of Jupiter Discovered in 1610 by Marius and Galileo Radius = 1,815 km Density.

Dec 16, 2015

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Page 1: Tectonics of Io By Dave Parmelee 4/21/05. Io Statistics 3 rd largest moon of Jupiter Discovered in 1610 by Marius and Galileo Radius = 1,815 km Density.

Tectonics of Io

By Dave Parmelee

4/21/05

Page 2: Tectonics of Io By Dave Parmelee 4/21/05. Io Statistics 3 rd largest moon of Jupiter Discovered in 1610 by Marius and Galileo Radius = 1,815 km Density.

Io Statistics

• 3rd largest moon of Jupiter• Discovered in 1610 by

Marius and Galileo• Radius = 1,815 km• Density = 3.57 g/cm3

• Surface gravity is 18.3% of Earth’s

• 421,600 km from Jupiter• 5.20 AU from Sun• Mean surface temp: ~135K

Page 3: Tectonics of Io By Dave Parmelee 4/21/05. Io Statistics 3 rd largest moon of Jupiter Discovered in 1610 by Marius and Galileo Radius = 1,815 km Density.

More info

• Core composed of Fe and FeS extends half way to surface

• No visible impact craters young surface• Most volcanically active body in the Solar System• Generates twice as much heat as Earth• Surface characterized by mountains and paterae

– Patera – a topographic depression >1 km in diameter that is not obviously impact-generated (also referred to as a caldera)

Page 4: Tectonics of Io By Dave Parmelee 4/21/05. Io Statistics 3 rd largest moon of Jupiter Discovered in 1610 by Marius and Galileo Radius = 1,815 km Density.

Volcanism on Io

• At least 120 active volcanoes on Io

• Volcanic features: plumes, lava lakes, lava flows

• Signature volcano landform is the patera

• Volcanoes on Io do not form tall mountains– Low viscosity lava

– Pyroclasts blow away

Page 5: Tectonics of Io By Dave Parmelee 4/21/05. Io Statistics 3 rd largest moon of Jupiter Discovered in 1610 by Marius and Galileo Radius = 1,815 km Density.

Source of heat

Gravitational pull from Jupiter creates intense tidal bulges on Io. Orbital resonance due to Europa prevents this system from reaching equilibrium.

Page 6: Tectonics of Io By Dave Parmelee 4/21/05. Io Statistics 3 rd largest moon of Jupiter Discovered in 1610 by Marius and Galileo Radius = 1,815 km Density.

Continual resurfacing

Intense tidal friction High levels of volcanism Continual resurfacing

– Between 1979 and 1996, about a dozen areas on Io the size of Connecticut were resurfaced

– Resurfacing on Io is estimated to occur at a rate of 1 cm/year

– Resurfacing rates play a critical role in the formation of Io’s mountains

Page 7: Tectonics of Io By Dave Parmelee 4/21/05. Io Statistics 3 rd largest moon of Jupiter Discovered in 1610 by Marius and Galileo Radius = 1,815 km Density.

Tectonic features

• Tectonics on Earth horizontal

Tectonics on Io vertical• 149 mountains discovered on Io; 165 estimated to

exist– Almost all of these are tectonic, not volcanic

• A statistical correlation exists between location of mountains and paterae, suggesting a link between tectonism and volcanism on Io

Page 8: Tectonics of Io By Dave Parmelee 4/21/05. Io Statistics 3 rd largest moon of Jupiter Discovered in 1610 by Marius and Galileo Radius = 1,815 km Density.

Model 1: Subsidence-induced stress

• Constant resurfacing buries the old crust, causing horizontal compression (boiled egg analogy)

σsubsidence = E/(1-υ) * z/R

• This causes pervasive fracturing in the lithosphere below a depth of ~4 km

• Stress is relieved by thrust faulting

Page 9: Tectonics of Io By Dave Parmelee 4/21/05. Io Statistics 3 rd largest moon of Jupiter Discovered in 1610 by Marius and Galileo Radius = 1,815 km Density.

Model 2: Thermal-induced stress

• Theory—resurfacing rates fluctuate over time and space; a decrease leads to heat build-up in the lower lithosphere, causing thermal expansion

σthermal = EαΔT/(1-υ)

• Requires dramatic fluctuations in resurfacing rates to cause a stress of any significance

Page 10: Tectonics of Io By Dave Parmelee 4/21/05. Io Statistics 3 rd largest moon of Jupiter Discovered in 1610 by Marius and Galileo Radius = 1,815 km Density.

Comparison of stresses

In reality, it is probably a combination of the stresses that drives crustal uplift, although unless the lithosphere is extremely thin or resurfacing rates are much slower than estimated, subsidence-related compressional stress plays a larger role than thermal expansion. (Figure from Jaeger et al. 2003.)

Page 11: Tectonics of Io By Dave Parmelee 4/21/05. Io Statistics 3 rd largest moon of Jupiter Discovered in 1610 by Marius and Galileo Radius = 1,815 km Density.

Lithosphere thickness

• The base of the lithosphere on Io is assumed to be at the 1500 K isotherm

• By estimating the volume of all of Io’s mountains and making it ΔV for the entire lithosphere, we can find the depth of the 1500 K isotherm– This is a minimum value

• The value comes out to ~12 km– At this thickness, subsidence causes the primary stress,

but stress due to thermal expansion is significant

Page 12: Tectonics of Io By Dave Parmelee 4/21/05. Io Statistics 3 rd largest moon of Jupiter Discovered in 1610 by Marius and Galileo Radius = 1,815 km Density.

Focusing mechanism necessary

• A lithosphere that is pervasively fractured and undergoes thrust faulting would tend to uplift as parallel mountain ranges

• However Io’s mountains are isolated and randomly distributed

• Therefore a stress-focusing mechanism is necessary to focus stress in the lithosphere at a point and prevent uplift of parallel ridges

Page 13: Tectonics of Io By Dave Parmelee 4/21/05. Io Statistics 3 rd largest moon of Jupiter Discovered in 1610 by Marius and Galileo Radius = 1,815 km Density.

The role of hot spots

• Large number of volcanic centers supports idea of many hot spots

• Association of many mountains with paterae (volcanic centers) suggests connection between hot spots and tectonic uplift

• Theory—Asthenospheric diapirs act to focus compressive stress in the lithosphere directly over the diapir head

Page 14: Tectonics of Io By Dave Parmelee 4/21/05. Io Statistics 3 rd largest moon of Jupiter Discovered in 1610 by Marius and Galileo Radius = 1,815 km Density.

Conclusions

• There is still much speculation regarding tectonism on Io

• The primary cause of stress is probably subsidence-related horizontal compression

• Thermal expansion also causes a non-negligible stress

• Evidence supports but does not prove the theory that lithospheric stress is focused by diapirs

Page 15: Tectonics of Io By Dave Parmelee 4/21/05. Io Statistics 3 rd largest moon of Jupiter Discovered in 1610 by Marius and Galileo Radius = 1,815 km Density.

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