Welcome to the new version of CaltechAUTHORS. Login is currently restricted to library staff. If you notice any issues, please email coda@library.caltech.edu
Published December 2021 | Supplemental Material + Published
Journal Article Open

Modeling the formation of Menrva impact crater on Titan: Implications for habitability

Abstract

Titan is unique in the solar system: it is an ocean world, an icy world, an organic world, and has a dense atmosphere. It is a geologically active world as well, with ongoing exogenic processes, such as rainfall, sediment transportation and deposition, erosion, and possible endogenic processes, such as tectonism and cryovolcanism. This combination of an organic and an ocean world makes Titan a prime target for astrobiological research, as biosignatures may be present in its surface, in impact melt deposits and in cryovolcanic flows, as well as in deep ice and water ocean underneath the outer ice shell. Impact craters are important sites in this context, as they may have allowed an exchange of materials between Titan's layers, in particular between the surface, composed of organic sediments over icy bedrock, and the subsurface ocean. It is also possible that impacts may have favored the advance of prebiotic chemical reactions themselves, by providing thermal energy that would allow these reactions to proceed. To investigate possible exchange pathways between the subsurface water ocean and the organic-rich surface, we modeled the formation of the largest crater on Titan, Menrva, with a diameter of ca. 425 km. The premise is that, given a large enough impact event, the resulting crater could breach into Titan's ice shell and reach the subsurface ocean, creating pathways connecting the surface and the ocean. Materials from the deep subsurface ocean, including salts and potential biosignatures of putative subsurface biota, could be transported to the surface. Likewise, atmospherically derived organic surface materials could be directly inserted into the ocean, where they could undergo aqueous hydrolysis to form potential astrobiological building blocks, such as amino acids. To study the formation of a Menrva-like impact crater, we staged numerical simulations using the iSALE-2D shock physics code. We varied assumed ice shell thickness from 50 to 125 km and assumed thermal structure over a range consistent with geophysical data. We analyze the implications and potential contributions of impact cratering as a process that can facilitate the exchange of surface organics with liquid water. Our findings indicate that melt and partial melt of ice took place in the central zone, reaching ca. 65 km depth and ca. 60 km away from the center of the structure. Furthermore, a volume of ca. 10² km³ of ocean water could be traced to depths as shallow as 10 km. These results highlight the potential for a significant exchange of materials from the surface (organics and ice) and the subsurface (water ocean), particularly in the crater's central area. Our studies suggest that large hypervelocity impacts are a viable and likely key mechanism to create pathways between the underground water ocean and Titan's organic-rich surface layer and atmosphere.

Additional Information

© 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). Received 24 February 2021, Revised 23 August 2021, Accepted 24 August 2021, Available online 27 August 2021. This research was supported partly by the JPL-led NASA Astrobiology Institute team "Habitability of Hydrocarbon Worlds: Titan and Beyond". Part of this work was carried out at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, under contract with NASA. Government sponsorship is acknowledged. A.P.C. acknowledges the financial support from the São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP, grant #2017/27081-1) and the State University of Campinas (Unicamp), which allowed part of this research to be developed during his stay at JPL as a visiting scientist. The research was also partly supported by the Cassini Data Analysis and Participating Scientists Program (CDAPS), through grant #NH16ZDA001N to R.L. A.S. is partly supported by the Czech Science Foundation (grant no. 20-27624Y). B.C.J. and J.M.S. were supported by Cassini Data Analysis Program grant 80NSSC20K0382. We gratefully acknowledge the developers of iSALE-2D (www.isalecode.de), the simulation code used in our research, including Gareth Collins, Kai Wünnermann, Dirk Elbeshausen, Boris Ivanov, and Jay Melosh. Data associated with this study are listed in tables in the supplementary information. The simulations were performed using iSALE r-2114. The simulation inputs and model outputs are available on Harvard Dataverse, DOI: 10.7910/DVN/VM0GI9. Our acknowledgments also to Icarus' editors and two reviewers, C. Neish and J. Hedgepeth, for their insightful comments and suggestions. Declaration of Competing Interest: None.

Attached Files

Published - 1-s2.0-S0019103521003365-main.pdf

Supplemental Material - 1-s2.0-S0019103521003365-mmc1.docx

Files

1-s2.0-S0019103521003365-main.pdf
Files (6.6 MB)
Name Size Download all
md5:d97e6a45dd6e9d16ad0c3cc0450052cd
151.9 kB Download
md5:feca7e81b2fcc2dc81c78520004a8c0c
6.5 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023