Abstract

AbstractObservations of Callisto's atmosphere have indicated an O2 component should exist, but the evolution from its initial source to its inferred steady‐state abundance is not well understood. Herein we constrain the production of O2 via radiolysis within Callisto's exposed ice patches and determine the corresponding O2 column density. To do so, for the first time we simulate the thermal and energetic components of the Jovian magnetospheric plasma irradiating Callisto's atmosphere and estimate energy deposited therein by the impinging charged particles along their trajectories to the surface. We then calculate O2 source fluxes corresponding to the energy of the impacting plasma fluxes, which is coupled with estimated atmospheric lifetimes to determine the steady‐state abundance of O2. Our results suggest that production of O2 via radiolysis within the exposed ice on Callisto's surface does not produce a sufficiently dense atmosphere relative to the column densities inferred from observations by about 2–3 orders of magnitude. To resolve this discrepancy between estimated and observed abundances, we provide the first estimates for other potential sources of atmospheric O2. We also make similar estimates for the production of H2 in Callisto's atmosphere relative to constraints provided in the literature, and the conclusion is the same: a sufficiently dense atmosphere is not produced. Thus, we have shown that a better understanding of the production and fate of radiolytic products in Callisto's regolith is required in order to place firmer constraints on the generation mechanisms of its atmosphere in preparation for future observations.

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