期刊
ICARUS
卷 208, 期 2, 页码 896-904出版社
ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.icarus.2010.02.020
关键词
Titan; Tides, Solid body; Geophysics
资金
- NASA OPR
The long-wavelength topography of Titan has an amplitude larger than that expected from tidal and rotational distortions at its current distance from Saturn. This topography is associated with small gravity anomalies, indicating a high degree of compensation. Both observations can be explained if Titan has a floating, isostatically-compensated ice shell with a spatially-varying thickness. The spatial variations arise because of laterally-variable tidal heating within the ice shell. Models incorporating shell thickness variations result in an improved fit to the observations and a degree-two tidal Love number h(2t) consistent with expectations, without requiring Titan to have moved away from Saturn. Our preferred models have a mean shell thickness of approximate to 100 km in agreement with the observed gravity anomalies, and a heat flux appropriate to a chondritic Titan. Shell thickness variations are eliminated by convection; we therefore conclude that Titan's ice shell is not convecting at the present day. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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