Zusammenfassung
Stereo topography of an area near Tyre impact crater, Europa, reveals
chaos regions characterised by marginal cliffs and domical topography,
rising to 100-200 m above the background plains. The regions contain
blocks which have both rotated and tilted. We tested two models of
chaos formation: a hybrid diapir model, in which chaos topography
is caused by thermal or compositional buoyancy, and block motion
occurs due to the presence of near-surface (1-3 km) melt; and a melt-through
model, in which chaos regions are caused by melting and refreezing
of the ice shell. None of the hybrid diapir models tested generate
any melt within 1-3 km of the surface, owing to the low surface temperature.
A model of ocean refreezing following melt-through gives effective
elastic thicknesses and ice shell thicknesses of 0.1-0.3 and 0.5-2
km, respectively. However, for such low shell thicknesses the refreezing
model requires implausibly large lateral density contrasts (50-100
kg m-3) to explain the elevation of the centres of the chaos regions.
Although a global equilibrium ice shell thickness of approximate2
km is possible if Europa's mantle resembles that of Io, it is unclear
whether local melt-through events are energetically possible. Thus,
neither of the models tested here gives a completely satisfactory
explanation for the formation of chaos regions. We suggest that surface
extrusion of warm ice may be an important component of chaos terrain
formation, and demonstrate that such extrusion is possible for likely
ice parameters.
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