2023
DOI: 10.3847/psj/ace5a2
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Salt Distribution from Freezing Intrusions in Ice Shells on Ocean Worlds: Application to Europa

Mariam Naseem,
Marc Neveu,
Samuel Howell
et al.

Abstract: Several icy moons and dwarf planets appear to have hosted subsurface liquid water. Liquid water intruding upwards into the icy outer shells of these worlds freezes, forming ice and (from ocean solutes) non-ice solids. Here, we model concentrated aqueous solutions below 273 K to simulate the compositional evolution of freezing spherical intrusions. Starting solutions are based on five previously reported compositional end members for Europa’s ocean. For moderate-pH end members dominated by chloride, sulfate, an… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…The first one is the formation of an organic film at the top of the ocean, as has been inferred for Enceladus's own subsurface ocean (Postberg et al 2018). The second one is slow freezing of brines on their way to the surface, which would segregate solutes and increase their concentration, as studied for salts (Naseem et al 2023) and envisioned as an industrial process to concentrate organics, e.g., Baker (1967) and Kammerer & Lee (1969), who achieved it with considerably shorter freezing times than would occur on Europa. Therefore, ocean material reaching the surface could feature locally high concentrations of organics, for which the chemistry investigated in the present work is relevant.…”
Section: Properties Of the Organic Residuementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The first one is the formation of an organic film at the top of the ocean, as has been inferred for Enceladus's own subsurface ocean (Postberg et al 2018). The second one is slow freezing of brines on their way to the surface, which would segregate solutes and increase their concentration, as studied for salts (Naseem et al 2023) and envisioned as an industrial process to concentrate organics, e.g., Baker (1967) and Kammerer & Lee (1969), who achieved it with considerably shorter freezing times than would occur on Europa. Therefore, ocean material reaching the surface could feature locally high concentrations of organics, for which the chemistry investigated in the present work is relevant.…”
Section: Properties Of the Organic Residuementioning
confidence: 99%