Renggli, CJ; Klemme, S; Morlok, A; Berndt, J; Weber, I; Hiesinger, H; King, PL
Research article (journal) | Peer reviewedThe surface of Mercury is enriched in sulfur, with up to 4 wt.% detected by the NASA MESSENGER mission, and has been challenging to understand in the context of other terrestrial planets. We posit, that magmatic S was mobilized as a gas phase in volcanic and impact processes near the surface, exposing silicates to a hot S-rich gas at reducing conditions and allowing conditions for rapid gas-solid reactions. Here we present novel experiments on the reaction of Mercury composition glasses with reduced S-rich gas, forming Ca- and Mg-sulfides. The reaction products provide porous and fragile materials that create previously enigmatic hollows on Mercury. Our model predicts that the gas-solid reaction forms Ca-Mg-Fe-Ti-sulfide assemblages with SiO2 and aluminosilicates, distinct from formation as magmatic minerals. The ESA/JAXA BepiColombo mission to Mercury will allow this hypothesis to be tested.
| Gerdes, Jasper | Professur für Petrologie (Prof. Klemme)  | 
| Hiesinger, Harald | Professorship for geological planetology (Prof. Hiesinger)  | 
| Klemme, Stephan | Professur für Petrologie (Prof. Klemme)  | 
| Morlok, Andreas | Professorship for geological planetology (Prof. Hiesinger)  | 
| Renggli, Christian Josef | Professur für Petrologie (Prof. Klemme)  | 
| Weber, Iris | Professorship for geological planetology (Prof. Hiesinger)  | 
Duration: 01/01/2020 - 31/12/2024 | 1st Funding period Funded by: DFG - Collaborative Research Centre Type of project: Subproject in DFG-joint project hosted at University of Münster  |