Geophysical implications of the long-wavelength topography of Rhea

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Abstract

We use limb profiles to investigate the long-wavelength topography and topographic variance spectrum of Rhea. One-dimensional variance spectra show a break in slope at a wavelength of ≈300 km; a similar effect is seen on the Moon and may be a signature of an elastic lithosphere having a thickness T e ≈ 10 km. The implied heat flux is ∼15 mW m-2, much higher than can be explained by radiogenic heating. We use the 1-D spectral behavior to constrain our solution for the long-wavelength global topography of Rhea. The degree 3 topography is large enough, if uncompensated, to contaminate estimates of the degree 2 gravity using existing flyby data. Current models of Rhea internal structures which rely on these degree 2 estimates may thus be inaccurate, illustrating the need to acquire further Rhea gravity data. Copyright 2010 by the American Geophysical Union.

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Nimmo, F., Bills, B. G., Thomas, P. C., & Asmar, S. W. (2010). Geophysical implications of the long-wavelength topography of Rhea. Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets, 115(10). https://doi.org/10.1029/2010JE003604

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