Three-dimensional simulation of gas and dust in Io’s Pele plume

•We show how the geometry of the lava lake at Pele produces the ovoid red ring on Io.•Gas expands to the north and south because of gas-dynamic effects at low altitudes.•Ash particles fall in distinctive patterns depending on their size.•We find a size distribution for ash particles which explains t...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inIcarus (New York, N.Y. 1962) Vol. 257; pp. 251 - 274
Main Authors McDoniel, William J., Goldstein, David B., Varghese, Philip L., Trafton, Laurence M.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Inc 01.09.2015
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Summary:•We show how the geometry of the lava lake at Pele produces the ovoid red ring on Io.•Gas expands to the north and south because of gas-dynamic effects at low altitudes.•Ash particles fall in distinctive patterns depending on their size.•We find a size distribution for ash particles which explains the black fans at Pele.•Ash preserves information about the flow from the very surface of the lava lake. Io’s giant Pele plume rises high above the moon’s surface and produces a complex deposition pattern. We use the direct simulation Monte Carlo (DSMC) method to model the flow of SO2 gas and silicate ash from the surface of the lava lake, into the umbrella-shaped canopy of the plume, and eventually onto the surface where the flow leaves black “butterfly wings” surrounded by a large red ring. We show how the geometry of the lava lake, from which the gas is emitted, is responsible for significant asymmetry in the plume and for the shape of the red deposition ring by way of complicated gas-dynamic interactions between parts of the gas flow arising from different areas in the lava lake. We develop a model for gas flow in the immediate vicinity of the lava lake and use it to show that the behavior of ash particles of less than about 2μm in diameter in the plume is insensitive to the details of how they are introduced into the flow because they are coupled to the gas at low altitudes. We simulate dust particles in the plume to show how particle size determines the distance from the lava lake at which particles deposit on the surface, and we use this dependence to find a size distribution of black dust particles in the plume that provides the best explanation for the observed black fans to the east and west of the lava lake. This best-fit particle size distribution suggests that there may be two distinct mechanisms of black dust creation at Pele, and when two log-normal distributions are fit to our results we obtain a mean particle diameter of 88nm. We also propose a mechanism by which the condensible plume gas might overlay black dust in areas where black coloration is not observed and compare this to the observed overlaying of Pillanian dust by Pele’s red ring.
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ISSN:0019-1035
1090-2643
DOI:10.1016/j.icarus.2015.03.019