4.7 Article

The permanently shadowed regions of dwarf planet Ceres

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 43, Issue 13, Pages 6783-6789

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2016GL069368

Keywords

Ceres; cold traps; Dawn mission; planetary science

Funding

  1. National Aeronautics and Space Administration [NNX15AI38G]
  2. DACGIP

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Ceres has only a small spin axis tilt (4 degrees), and craters near its rotational poles can experience permanent shadow and trap volatiles, as is the case on Mercury and on Earth's Moon. Topography derived from stereo imaging by the Dawn spacecraft is used to calculate direct solar irradiance that defines the extent of the permanently shadowed regions (PSRs). In the northern polar region, PSRs cover approximate to 1800km(2) or 0.13% of the hemisphere, and most of the PSRs are cold enough to trap water ice over geological time periods. Based on modeling of the water exosphere, water molecules seasonally reside around the winter pole and ultimately an estimated 0.14% of molecules get trapped. Even for the lowest estimates of the amount of available water, this predicts accumulation rates in excess of loss rates, and hence, there should be fresh ice deposits in the cold traps.

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