Volatile Loss and Classification of Kuiper Belt Objects
Abstract
Observations indicate that some of the largest Kuiper Belt Objects (KBOs) have retained volatiles in the gas phase, which implies the presence of an atmosphere that can affect their reflectance spectra and thermal balance. Volatile escape rates driven by solar heating of the surface were estimated by Schaller and Brown (2007) (SB) and Levi and Podolak (2009)(LP) using Jeans escape from the surface and a hydrodynamic model respectively. Based on recent molecular kinetic simulations these rates can be hugely in error (e.g., a factor of 1016 for the SB estimate for Pluto). In this paper we estimate the loss of primordial N2 for several large KBOs guided by recent molecular kinetic simulations of escape due to solar heating of the surface and due to UV/EUV heating of the upper atmosphere. For the latter we extrapolate simulations of escape from Pluto (Erwin et al. 2013) using the energy limited escape model recently validated for the KBOs of interest by molecular kinetic simulations (Johnson et al. 2013). Unless the N2 atmosphere is thin ( 1018 N2/cm2) and/or the radius small ( 200-300 km), we find that escape is primarily driven by the UV/EUV radiation absorbed in the upper atmosphere rather than the solar heating of the surface. This affects the previous interpretations of the relationship between atmospheric loss and the observed surface properties. The long-term goal is to connect detailed atmospheric loss simulations with a model for volatile transport (e.g., Young, 2014) for individual KBOs.
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