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Jupiter's moon Io hosts extensive volcanism driven by tidal heating. The isotopic composition of Io's inventory of volatile elements, including sulfur and chlorine, reflects its outgassing and mass loss history and provides an avenue for exploring its evolution. We used millimeter observations of Io's atmosphere to measure sulfur isotopes in gaseous SO2 and SO, and chlorine isotopes in gaseous NaCl and KCl. We find ^34S/^32S=0. 05950. 0038 (^34S=+34786 per mille), which is highly enriched compared to average Solar System values and indicates that Io has lost 94 to 99% of its available sulfur. Our measurement of ^37Cl/^35Cl=0. 4030. 028 (^37Cl=+26388 per mille) shows chlorine is similarly enriched. These measurements indicate that Io has been volcanically active for most or all of its history, with potentially higher outgassing and mass-loss rates at earlier times.
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Katherine de Kleer
California Institute of Technology
Ery Hughes
Earth Science Institute of the Slovak Academy of Sciences
F. Nimmo
University of California, Santa Cruz
Science
Columbia University
New York University
California Institute of Technology
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Kleer et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e6e8a8b6db64358766351e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1126/science.adj0625