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A Near-surface Temperature Model of Arrokoth
A near-surface thermal model for Arrokoth is developed based on the recently released 10 5 facet model of the body. This thermal solution takes into account Arrokoth’s surface reradiation back onto itself. The solution method exploits Arrokoth’s periodic orbital character to develop a thermal respon...
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Published in: | The planetary science journal 2022-05, Vol.3 (5), p.110, Article 110 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | A near-surface thermal model for Arrokoth is developed based on the recently released 10
5
facet model of the body. This thermal solution takes into account Arrokoth’s surface reradiation back onto itself. The solution method exploits Arrokoth’s periodic orbital character to develop a thermal response using a time-asymptotic solution method, which involves a Fourier transform solution of the heat equation, an approach recently used by others. We display detailed thermal solutions assuming that Arrokoth’s near-surface material’s thermal inertia
=
2.5 W/m
−2
K
−1
s
1/2
. We predict that at New Horizons’ encounter with Arrokoth, its encounter hemisphere surface temperatures were ∼57–59 K in its polar regions, 30–40 K in its equatorial zones, and 11–13 K for its winter hemisphere. Arrokoth’s orbitally averaged temperatures are around 30–35 K in its polar regions and closer to 40 K near its equatorial zones. Thermal reradiation from the surrounding surface amounts to less than 5% of the total energy budget, while the total energy ensconced into and exhumed out of Arrokoth’s interior via thermal conduction over one orbit is about 0.5% of the total energy budget. As a generalized application of this thermal modeling together with other Kuiper Belt object origins considerations, we favor the interpretation that New Horizons’ REX instrument’s 29 ± 5 K brightness temperature measurement is consistent with Arrokoth’s near-surface material being made of sub-to-few-millimeter-size tholin-coated amorphous H
2
O ice grains with 1 W/m
−2
K
−1
s
1/2
<
<
10–20 W/m
−2
K
−1
s
1/2
and which are characterized by an
X
-band emissivity in the range 0.9 and 1. |
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ISSN: | 2632-3338 2632-3338 |
DOI: | 10.3847/PSJ/ac5d3d |