Abstract
<p>Observations from the Cassini spacecraft imply the presence of a global salty ocean underneath Enceladus’ ice shell, with ongoing hydrothermal activity at its seafloor. Previous numerical simulations showed that convection in Enceladus’ unconsolidated core generates enough dissipation to sustain the ocean and produces a strongly heterogeneous heat flow pattern at the seafloor that looks promising for explaining the surface ice topography. Yet, how the ocean in-between connects the deeper core to the surface ice shell is unknown. The dynamics of the ocean is thus the missing piece of the Enceladus puzzle towards a fully self-consistent model of the heat transfer in this moon. We fill this gap by performing 3D numerical simulations of the buried ocean of Enceladus. We show that, for the strongly heterogeneous heat flow pattern expected at the seafloor from the unconsolidated core model, azimuthal deflection of strongly localised plumes by the Coriolis force inhibits the heat transfer at low latitudes. The resulting heat flow pattern at the ocean/ice interface is qualitatively consistent with the surface ice topography and in decent quantitative agreement with an ice shell model derived from observations. Using passively advected tracers particles, we predict rising times for hydrothermal products of the order of 1-2 months, in line with previous observations-based predictions. We are thus now able to draw a complete self-consistent model of the heat transfer in Enceladus, explaining the global characteristics of this moon: global ocean, strong dissipation, reduced ice-shell thickness at the south pole and seafloor activity.</p>
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