The origin of the very low luminosity of Uranus is unknown, as is the source of the internal tidal dissipation required by the orbits of the Uranian moons. Models of the interior of Uranus often assume that it is inviscid throughout, but recent experiments show that this assumption may not be justified; most of the interior of Uranus lies below the freezing temperature of H2O. The authors find that the stable solid phase of H2O, which is superionic, has a large viscosity controlled by the crystalline oxygen sublattice. The authors examine the consequences of finite viscosity by combining ab initio determinations of the thermal conductivity and other material properties of superionic H2O with a thermal evolution model that accounts for heat trapped in the growing frozen core. The high viscosity provides a means of trapping heat in the deep interior while also providing a source of tidal dissipation. The frozen core grows with time because its outer boundary is governed by the freezing transition rather than compositional layering. We find that the presence of a growing frozen core explains the anomalously low heat flow of Uranus. Our thermal evolution model also predicts time-varying tidal dissipation that matches the requirements of the orbits of Miranda, Ariel, and Umbriel. The authors make predictions that are testable by future space missions, including the tidal Love number of Uranus and the current recessional rates of its moons.

Lars Stixrude, Stefano Baroni and Federico Grasselli

Type of paper:

The origin of the very low luminosity of Uranus is unknown, as is the source of the internal tidal dissipation required by the orbits of the Uranian moons. https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.3847/PSJ/ac2a47/pdf

© 2022, The Author(s)
 

https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/ac2a47