Near-infrared Methanol Bands Probe Energetic Processing of Icy Outer Solar System Objects

  • Urso R
  • Baklouti D
  • Djouadi Z
  • et al.
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Abstract

Frozen methanol was detected in the outer solar system on the surfaces of the Centaur 5145 Pholus, the Trans-Neptunian Object (55638) 2002 VE 95 , and more recently on (486958) Arrokoth. The icy surfaces of these objects are subjected to solar and cosmic ions that modify the physico-chemical properties of their surface. To study the effects of ion bombardment on methanol-rich surfaces, we performed experiments of ion irradiation of H 2 O:CH 3 OH mixtures and we monitored the evolution of the methanol near-infrared bands. We observed significant variations of the 2.34/2.27 μ m methanol band ratios as a function of the irradiation dose. We then used the Arrokoth and Pholus spectra to test the 2.34/2.27 μ m band ratio as a probe of irradiation of methanol-rich surfaces, and we estimated the timescales of processing by solar and cosmic ions. Our results indicate that solar energetic particles are the main drivers of changes in the near-infrared spectra of frozen surfaces in the outer solar system.

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Urso, R. G., Baklouti, D., Djouadi, Z., Pinilla-Alonso, N., & Brunetto, R. (2020). Near-infrared Methanol Bands Probe Energetic Processing of Icy Outer Solar System Objects. The Astrophysical Journal Letters, 894(1), L3. https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/ab8ad9

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