In un paese come l`Italia, caratterizzato da una forte densità abitativa
Transcript
In un paese come l`Italia, caratterizzato da una forte densità abitativa
Scuola di Dottorato in Scienze della Terra, Dipartimento di Geoscienze, Università degli Studi di Padova – A.A. 2010-2011 THE HERMEAN SURFACE: THE INTERPLAY BETWEEN REMOTE SENSING IMAGING AND SPECTRAL SIGNATURE Ph.D. candidate: FERRARI SABRINA, Tutors: Dott. MATTEO MASSIRONI, Prof. FABRIZIO NESTOLA Cycle: XXV Abstract The special yield of remote sensing data from the recent Mercury Surface Space ENvironment GEochemistry and Ranging NASA mission - MESSENGER - currently allows a detailed analysis of litotypes and structural forms of the hermean surface. Thus, a geological classification of the domains and the features concerning impact basins - stratigraphy, composition and ages - could be easily reached through the elaboration and interpretation of remote sensing multi-band images and spectroscopic in-situ analysis, attempting to set up in laboratory the same environment of Mercury. The first year Ph.D. work has been dedicated to the remote sensing study of one of the most representative hermean basin, named Rembrandt Basin. At the same time, spectroscopic and diffraction data set have been collected on representative geological materials of the Mercury surface at its typical temperature range. Introduction During its second and third flybys, MESSENGER imaged a new large and well-preserved basin called Rembrandt Basin located at Mercury’s southern hemisphere (Watters et al., 2009). Rembrandt basin is a 715-km-diameter impact feature which displays a distinct hummocky rim, broken up by the presence of several large impact craters. Its interior is partially filled by volcanic materials, that extend up to the southern, eastern and part of the western rims, and is crossed by a marked lobate scarp. In the first stage of our studies, MESSENGER Mercury Dual Imaging System (MDIS) mosaics1 have been used to map its geological domains and infer - where possible - their stratigraphic relationships. At the same time, the contractional and extensional local patterns and the global tectonic features have been well-fixed. Then, crater counts have been performed on each unit, in order to estimate the ages by applying the Model Production Function (MPF) (Marchi et al., 2009). A further aim of MESSANGER is mapping the composition of the hermean surface by the Mercury Atmospheric and Surface Composition Spectrometer (MASCS), that has already produced a first average spectrum along an approximate equatorial trajectory (McClintock et al., 2008). In this light, the second stage of the Ph.D. project wants to take into account the large day-night thermal variation occurred along the hermean equatorial surface, which can strongly affect the surface mineral spectral features. In particular, the spectral variations of the main minerals assumed to be present on the Mercury surface have been investigated as a function of temperature by in situ measurements performed in laboratory. Beyond the spectroscopic measurements, in situ X-ray diffraction data will be collected from 10 to 730 K on the same samples measured by spectroscopy in order to define the volume thermal coefficients and to explain any possible spectral variations in terms of structure change. Geo-structural mapping Rembrandt Basin displays evidence of both global-scale and basin-localized deformations possibly controlled by the rheological layering within the crust. Extensional features are essentially radial and confined to the Inner Plains, displaying one or more uplifts episodes of the inner basin. The more widespread wrinkle ridges form a polygonal pattern of radial and concentric features on the whole floor, probably due to one or more near-surface compressional stages (Watters et al., 2009). Thus, through their cross-cutting relationships, it is attempted to distinguish the cascade of events. About global landforms, a structural and kinematic analysis focused on the mayor 1000-km long Rembrandt scarp has been conducted. The structure can be subdivided into three branches: the southern one with clear evidences of a right-lateral strike slip movement acting together with an inverse kinematic, the northern one (fig. 1) with some evidences of a left-lateral component and the central sector without a great evidence of strike slip movements. The inferred propagation trend is South-East. 1 Scuola di Dottorato in Scienze della Terra, Dipartimento di Geoscienze, Università degli Studi di Padova – A.A. 2010-2011 The resulting bow shape geometry could be compared with the Beagle Rupes (Rothery and Massironi, 2010) feature despite Rembrandt structure does not show a clear frontal ramp but two lateral ramps converging in a narrow cusp, which is characterized by a steep surface-breaking thrust. The main phase responsible of the Rembrandt scarp build-up was followed by minor compressional structures detected within younger craters and possibly associated to a slowing down phase of the global contraction. Figure 1. Rembrandt Basin from MESSENGER MDIS-NAC image and (a) geological sketch of the northern-branch of Rembrandt scarp over the geological map: Hummocky Area (red color), Proximal Ejecta (pale grey color) , Inner Plains (red color), surface-breaking thrust (white lines). Age determination The basin has been subdivided into three main systems for age determination purposes (fig. 1): the Hummocky Area, a mixture of impact melts and breccias, the Proximal Ejecta fallen beyond the rim and the volcanic Inner Plains, which flooded the crater floor after the impact. The age assessment was obtained by adopting Marchi et al. (2009) chronological model, since it takes into account both (1) the Main Belt Asteroids (MBAs) and the Near Earth Objects (NEOs) projectile populations and (2) the uppermost layering of the target (Massironi et al., 2009). More in detail, a lunar-like crustal structure has been adopted and fractured silicates of variable thickness have been set on top of a bulk anorthositic crust, which in turn laying above a peridotitic mantle. In the case of the Rembrandt basin system, the adopted layering for MPF age determination was well constrained by the good statistics and crater-diameter range of the data set. The Crater Size-Frequency Distribution (CSFD) of the Hummocky Area shows a typical kink, which likely reflects a layer of fractured material with a thickness of about 8.5 km, whereas the Inner Plains show a slight kink despite the wide crater diameter range that characterizes their population (fig. 2). Considering these constraints on the crustal layering and an MBAs population, the inferred MPF ages imply a short stage of volcanism straight after the basin formation, between 3.77 and 3.82 Gy, whereas the concurrent structural analysis shows a prolonged activity of global contraction well-expressed along the Rembrandt scarp Figure 2. Crater Size-Frequency Distribution (CSFD) of the Hummocky Area (on the left) and of the Inner Plains (on the right). 1. Greyscale images at 500 meters/pixel (~85.17 pixels/degree) resolution have been used in two different projection, depending on the aim of work. All images are courtesy of USGS Astrogeology Science Center http://astrogeology.usgs.gov and come from MESSENGER MDIS/Mariner 10 mosaics. 2 Scuola di Dottorato in Scienze della Terra, Dipartimento di Geoscienze, Università degli Studi di Padova – A.A. 2010-2011 (Sampling to lab and) Low-high temperature behaviour It is well known that the surface of Mercury can undergo a temperature excursion extremely large at specific locations (Strom, 1987). The temperature can range in 44 earth days between 70 and 725 K at different latitudes and it is easy to assume that such changes can cause strong crystal structure changes. As a consequence, the spectral signature of minerals assumed to be present on the Mercury surface could be significantly affected as well as the reflectance values. Aim of this work is to determine which is the expansion of such minerals within a so wide T range in order to verify its effect on the reflectance. As a first experiment the low-high temperature behavior of an Fe-poorer olivine has been investigated as a possible constituent of the Mercury surface regolith. A sample with Fo92Fa8 composition - coming from Mt. Leura (Secco and Princivalle, 1985) - has been selected and analyzed by X-ray diffraction under non-ambient conditions, from 10 to 775 K, at the Institut für Kristallographie RWTH in Aachen, Germany (fig. 3). Data collected in a previous work on Fo92Fa8, Fo80Fa20, Fo71Fa29 and Fo62Fa38 were studied by single crystal X-ray diffraction, at room conditions and by using the same experimental procedure (Nestola et al., 2010). Comparing our results with those of Nestola et al. (2010) it appears clear that the same volume increase observed for our Fo92Fa8 sample with increasing the temperature by 635 K is found for a 30% of increase of Fe content along the Fo-Fa binary join due to the increase of the cationic radius for the Mg/Fe substitution. Therefore, these results indicate that the hermean surface has a chameleon-like behavior for spectral data and that important misinterpretations can occur if the typical temperature variations are not taken into account. The emissivity spectra obtained under non ambient temperature conditions at the Planetary Emissivity Laboratory (PEL) in Berlin (Helbert et al., 2009) will clarify the effect of iron on the volume thermal expansion of olivine. These data will be combined with the X-ray diffraction data in order to explain any anomaly or complexity showed by the spectra collected under non ambient temperature conditions. To this end, other samples of the maximum likelihood constituents of the hermean surface regolith (Warell et al., 2010) will be investigated: a labradorite plagioclase (extracted by a Flakstadøy Basic Complex anorthosite, sampled in July 2010 Figure 3. Thermal expansion of the Fo92Fa8 at Lofoten Island, Norway) and two distinct Mg-rich olivine, occurred between 10 and 775 K. clinopyroxenes (samples 49-5858 coming from Ontario, Canada and samples 49E-0814 coming from Oregon, USA) have been well characterized at room conditions by single crystal X-ray diffraction and analyzed by electron microprobe (WDS method). After then, the samples have been reduced in two different presumed grain-sizes about the hermean surface regolith: 30 m and 100 m (Emery et al., 1998). The emissivity measurements will be carried out at four different steps of temperature (150°-250°-350°470°C) for each grain-size. The expected results will represent first reference data with the aim to build a complete in situ high-temperature spectral data base, capable to take into account the temperature variations for Mercury and several planetary bodies. 3 Scuola di Dottorato in Scienze della Terra, Dipartimento di Geoscienze, Università degli Studi di Padova – A.A. 2010-2011 References EMERY, J.P., SPRAGUE, A.L., WITTEBORN, F.C., COLWELL, J.E., KOZLOWSKI, R.W.H. and WOODEN D.H. 1998. Mercury: Thermal Modeling and Mid-infrared (5–12 μm) Observations. Icarus, 136 (1), 104-123. HELBERT, J. and MATURILLI, A. 2009. The emissivity of a fine-grained labradorite sample at typical Mercury dayside temperatures. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 285 (3-4), 347-354. MARCHI, S., MOTTOLA, S., CREMONESE, G., MASSIRONI, M., and MARTELLATO, E. 2009. A new Chronology for the Moon and Mercury. Astronomical Journal, 137, 4936-4948. MASSIRONI, M., CREMONESE, G., MARCHI, S., MARTELLATO, E., MOTTOLA, S. and WAGNER, R.J. 2009. Mercury's geochronology revised by applying Model Production Function to Mariner 10 data: Geological implications. Geophys. Res. Lett., 36, L21204. McCLINTOCK, W.E., IZEMBERG, N.R., HOLSCLAW G.M., BLEWETT, D.T., DOMINGUE, D.L., HEAD, J.W., HELBERT, J., McCOY, T.J., MURCHIE, S.L., ROBINSON, M.S., SOLOMON, S.C., SPRAGUE, A.L. and VILAS, F. 2008. Spectroscopic Observations of Mercury's Surface Reflectance During MESSENGER's First Mercury Flyby. Science, 321, 62-65. NESTOLA, F., PASQUAL, D., SECCO, L., DAL NEGRO, A., NOVELLA, D., TARANTINO, S. 2010. Elasticity of olivine. Geophysical Research Letters, submitted. ROTHERY, D.A. AND MASSIRONI, M. 2010. Beagle Rupes – evidence for a basal decollement of regional extent in Mercury’s lithosphere. Icarus, 209 (1), 256-261. SECCO, L. and PRINCIVALLE, F. 1985. Crystal Structure Refinement of 13 Olivines in the ForsteriteFayalite Series from Volcanic Rocks and Ultramafic Nodules. TMPM Tschermaks Min. Petr. Mitt., 34, 105-115. STROM, R.G. 1987. Mercury: The Elusive Planet, solar system series. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, USA. WARELL, J., SPRAGUE, A., KOZLOWSKI, R., ROTHERY, D.A., LEWIS, N., HELBERT, J. and CLOUTIS, E. 2010. Constraints on Mercury’s surface composition from MESSENGER and groundbased spectroscopy. Icarus, 209, 138-163. WATTERS, T.R., HEAD, J.W., SOLOMON, S.C., ROBINSON, M.S., CHAPMAN, C.R., DENEVI, B.W., FASSETT, C.I., MURCHIE, S.L., and STROM, R.G. 2009. Evolution of the Rembrandt Impact Basin on Mercury. Science, 324, 618-621. 4 Scuola di Dottorato in Scienze della Terra, Dipartimento di Geoscienze, Università degli Studi di Padova – A.A. 2010-2011 SUMMARY LAST YEAR’S ACTIVITY Courses: F. NESTOLA: “Metodologie analitiche”, Dipartimento di Geoscienze, Università degli Studi di Padova. S. BOESSO: “Corso di introduzione alla biblioteca”, Dipartimento di Geoscienze, Università degli Studi di Padova. A. RASSU, C. VINANTE, N. PRATICELLI: “Corso di Linux/Unix: corso introduttivo al sistema operativo Linux”, Dipartimento di Geoscienze, Università degli Studi di Padova. M. FLORIS: “Introduzione alle tecniche GIS”, Dipartimento di Geoscienze - Università degli Studi di Padova. F. PESARIN, L. SALMASO: “Statistica applicata alla sperimentazione scientifica”, Dipartimento di tecnica e gestione dei Sistemi Industriali, Università degli Studi di Padova. V. VANZANI: “Fisica dei pianeti”, Dipartimento di Astronomia, Università degli Studi di Padova. E. CALANDRUCCIO: “Corso di Inglese parlato”, Dipartimento di Geoscienze, Università degli Studi di Padova. F. CAMARA: “Risoluzione strutturale di sostanze inorganiche a struttura cristallina ignota”, Dipartimento di Geoscienze, Università degli Studi di Padova. Schools and workshops: CENTRO DI SERVIZI INTERDIPARTIMENTALE CUGAS, Corso teorico-applicativo sulle tecniche SEM e ESEM, II edizione, Università degli Studi di Padova, Padova, Italy FIRST EGU SUMMER SCHOOL, Structural Analysis of Crystalline Rocks, Nevessee Area/South Tyrol, Italy. Communications: MARTELLATO, E., MASSIRONI, M., CREMONESE G., MARCHI S., FERRARI S., PROCKTER L.M., 2010. Age Determination of Raditladi and Rembrandt Basins and Related Geological Units. 41st Lunar and Planetary Science Conference, The Woodlands/Texas, USA. MASSIRONI M., CREMONESE G., MARCHI S., MARTELLATO E., GIACOMINI L., FERRARI S., 2010. A review of Model Production Function age determinations on the Mercury surface. COSPAR 2010 38th sci-conference, Bremen, Germany. CREMONESE, G., CAPRIA, M.T., BETTANINI, C., CALAMAI, L., DEBEI, S., DA DEPPO, V., ENG, P., FERRARI, S., FORLANI, G., GIACOMINI, L., LANGEVIN, Y., MASSIRONI, M., MARTELLATO, E., NALETTO, G., ROCCELLA, R., SGAVETTI, M., SIMIONI, E., ZACCARIOTTO, M. and SIMBIO-SYS TEAMS, 2010. SIMBIO-SYS tutorial: the Stereo Channel. MASSIRONI, M. and SIMBIO-SYS team. SIMBIO-SYS contribution to Mercury knowledge: summary of science objectives from geologic perspective. Bepi Colombo Mission 7th Science Working Team Meeting, Graz, Austria. Posters: MARTELLATO E., FERRARI S., GIACOMINI L., CREMONESE G., MARCHI S., MASSIRONI M., ROTHERY D.A., 2010. Age Determination of Raditladi and Rembrandt Basins and Related Geological Units. European Geosciences Union assembly 2010, Wien, Austria. FERRARI S., MASSIRONI M., MARTELLATO E., GIACOMINI L., CREMONESE G., ROTHERY D.A., PROCKTER L.M., 2010. Geo-structural mapping and age determinations of Rembrandt Basin. COSPAR 2010 38th sci-conference, Bremen, Germany. NESTOLA F., FERRARI S., MASSIRONI M., CREMONESE G., VISONA’D., BRUNO M., FIORETTI A.M., CAPRIA M.T., REDHAMMER G.J., 2010. Low-high temperature behaviour of olivine: implication for Mercury surface. 89° Congresso Società Italiana di Mineralogia e Petrologia, Ferrara, Italy. FERRARI S., MASSIRONI M., MARTELLATO E., GIACOMINI L., CREMONESE G., ROTHERY D.A., PROCKTER L.M., 2010. Geo-structural mapping and age determinations of Rembrandt Basin region. European Planetary Science Congress 2010, Roma, Italy. Field work and lab activity: FIELD WORK IN NORTHERN NORWAY, in collaboration with Institutt for Geologi, Universitetet i Tromsø, July 9th-17th 2010, Lofoten Islands, Norway. SINGLE CRYSTAL X-RAY DIFFRACTION, at Dipartimento di Geoscienze, Padua, Italy. HIGH TEMPERATURE EXPERIMENTS TO PLANETARY EMISSIVITY LABORATORY (PEL) AT DLR BERLIN, granted by 7th Framework Programme / EuroPlanet Research Infrastructure, November 1st-12th 2010, Berlin, Germany. Grants: COSPAR 2010 38th sci-conference, Bremen/Germany, travel and expenses support, $850. Submitted funding proposals: Fondazione Ing. Aldo Gini – 2010 scholarship for Italian citizens to study abroad. 5
Documenti analoghi
In un paese come l`Italia, caratterizzato da una forte densità abitativa
The wide scarp crossing Rembrandt basin has been regarded as the surface expression of a large-scale
thrust fault system, which features a back-thrust and displays several kinematic indicators of l...
FROM DEEP SEATED GRAVITATIONAL MOVEMENTS TO ROCK
VARNES, D.J., RADBRUCH-HALL, D., SAVAGE, W.Z., 1989. Topographic and structural conditions
in areas of gravitational spreading of ridges in the western United States. US Geological Survey,
Professi...