Geological and topographical analysis of Anshar Sulcus, Ganymede: Implications for grooved terrain formation

Post contributed by Dr. Mafalda Ianiri, University G. d’Annunzio Chieti- Pescara, International Research School of Planetary Sciences.

The icy surface of Ganymede, the largest satellite of the Jupiter system, presents two dominant terrains characterized by different albedo: the dark and light terrains (Image 1). The dark terrains are composed of dark, albedo-heterogeneous material, modified by surficial processes, such as sublimation, mass wasting, and sputtering (ejection and redistribution of molecules across the Ganymede’s surface, which is caused by the energy transferred to the surface through the impact of particles from Jupiter’s magnetosphere; Pappalardo et al., 2004). The dark terrains are highly cratered, preserving the relicts of vast global-scale sets of concentrically arranged structures, called furrows (Pappalardo et al., 2004). The younger light terrains are more extensive than the dark terrains, covering approximately 64% of Ganymede’s surface (Patterson et al., 2010). Light terrains are pervasively crossed by sets of sub-parallel, closely spaced ridges and troughs, referred to as grooves (Patterson et al., 2010; Pappalardo et al., 2004).

Image 1: Geomorphological map of Anshar Sulcus region of Ganymede based on the 2865_r and 2878_r high resolution images captured by Galileo SSI camera. (Credit: Ianiri et al., 2023).

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New Images of Europa from Juno’s JunoCam

Post contributed by Dr Candice J. Hansen, Planetary Science Institute, USA

On the 29th of September 2022 the Juno spacecraft, in orbit around Jupiter, made a close pass by Jupiter’s icy moon Europa (Image 1). The spacecraft approached from Europa’s night side, passed the terminator (day-night boundary), and departed on the day side, coming within ~350 km of the surface.  Juno’s visible color imager, JunoCam, snapped 4 images of Europa as the spacecraft sped by at a speed of 23.6 km/sec on its way to its closest approach to Jupiter.  In an elliptical polar orbit, this was the only opportunity in the mission for Juno to get close to this moon of Jupiter and the first time since the Galileo mission ended in 2003 that any spacecraft has flown so close. 

Image 1.  The first image taken by JunoCam is centered on the subjovian hemisphere, extending to ~60 deg north and south.  This was the highest resolution image acquired. Image data: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS. Image processing: Brian Swift © CC BY.

Europa is categorized as an “ocean world” with a solid ice surface over a liquid water subsurface layer.  Europa is crisscrossed by numerous cracks, bands, ridges and troughs (lineaments) that record the tidal stress the moon experiences arising from the gravitational pull of Jupiter and its other moons. JunoCam’s image reveals numerous pits along the terminator.  The almost complete lack of craters tells us that geologically this icy surface is very young, resurfaced by lineament formation due to tidal flexing.  Callanish crater, one of the few imaged by JunoCam, is the circular feature visible in the lower right of Image 1.  

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Tectonic evolution of Ganymede’s leading hemisphere

Post contributed by Dr. Costanza Rossi, Astronomical Observatory of Padova, Italian National Institute for Astrophysics

During their 1979 flybys of the Jovian system, the Voyager probes revealed to us abundant evidence of global-scale structures on the icy satellite Ganymede (Image 1), showing that tectonic activity played a key role during its geologic history. Ganymede’s puzzling surface covers an internal liquid ocean and is characterized by two main geological units, the dark and light terrains (> 4 billion and 2 billion years old, respectively; Patterson et al., 2010), which are shaped by a complex tangle of linear to curvilinear morpho-tectonic structures (Image 1). There are brittle structures called furrows within the dark terrain, and grooves within the light one, which (apparently) represent disconnected deformation histories. Impact cratering processes affected the dark terrain by forming furrows with graben-like morphologies, which are interpreted as remnants of a multi-ring basin formed by a giant ancient impact (e.g., Prockter et al., 2000). On the other hand, the light terrain formed at the expense of the dark one, as a result of strong tectonics that formed the grooves (e.g., Pappalardo et al., 1998). Although extension is considered as the main process for the groove formation, it is assumed that strike-slip has been also pivotal during their development (Cameron et al., 2018; Rossi et al., 2018). The lack of pure compressional structures still represents one of the open enigmas of the tectonics of Ganymede. Ganymede’s tectonic-related landforms potentially represent pathways connecting the surface with the underlying ocean, and their investigation is pivotal to understand their possible development and interconnection at depth (e.g., Lucchetti et al., 2021), their evolution, and the endogenic processes responsible for their formation.

Image 1: Orthographic projection of the leading hemisphere of Ganymede (Voyager/Galileo global mosaic of Kersten et al., 2021). The dark squares show the location of Image 2 and the white square shows the location of Image 3.

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