P13A-2121
Librations and tides of icy satellites: model comparison for Enceladus

Monday, 14 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Antony Trinh, Royal Observatory of Belgium, Brussels, Belgium
Abstract:
The latest measurements of the librations of Enceladus suggest that it could have a global subsurface ocean or a non-hydrostatic core (Thomas et al. 2014). Further observations should constrain the properties of the ice shell, and similar insights are expected from future investigation of Europa and Ganymede.

Detailed models of the librations and tides are therefore required to properly interpret these measurements in terms of interior structure. Here we compare the `classical', separate tide and libration models (where spherical symmetry is assumed to compute the tides, Van Hoolst et al. 2013) with our combined tide+libration model (Trinh et al. 2013), both extended to account for non-hydrostatic structure.

Even with a global ocean, different mechanisms act to prevent Enceladus's shell from moving independently from the rest. Among those, pressure coupling across the flattened boundaries of the ocean requires special care if the shape is not fully relaxed. We discuss how it should be modelled in the classical approach to be consistent with the combined model.