by Roy » Sat Dec 16, 2023 5:45 pm
Surface shows rifts and cracks, leading to the theory of an ice moon with liquid water interior. I looked Enceladus up on Wikipedia.
Picture there shows some cratered terrain in what I assume is the north polar region. The moon is tide locked to Saturn, with an orbital period of 32.9 hours. Minimum temperature is given as -240 C., max -128 C. Gravity is a little over a hundredth earth’s, .0116 g.
I can surmise that impacts send shocks through the ice which open rifts, allowing liquid flows that immediately freeze into the observed terrain. Any vapor and debris from the impact can easily escape due to the low gravity.
Surface shows rifts and cracks, leading to the theory of an ice moon with liquid water interior. I looked Enceladus up on Wikipedia.
Picture there shows some cratered terrain in what I assume is the north polar region. The moon is tide locked to Saturn, with an orbital period of 32.9 hours. Minimum temperature is given as -240 C., max -128 C. Gravity is a little over a hundredth earth’s, .0116 g.
I can surmise that impacts send shocks through the ice which open rifts, allowing liquid flows that immediately freeze into the observed terrain. Any vapor and debris from the impact can easily escape due to the low gravity.