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Laboratory studies on the sputtering contribution to the sodium atmospheres of Mercury and the Moon

✍ Scribed by Catherine A. Dukes; Wen-Yen Chang; Marcelo Famá; Raúl A. Baragiola


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Weight
507 KB
Volume
212
Category
Article
ISSN
0019-1035

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✦ Synopsis


To ascertain the importance of sputtering by solar wind ions on the formation of a sodium exosphere around Mercury and the Moon, we have irradiated with 4 keV He ions, the Na bearing tectosilicates: albite, labradorite, and anorthoclase, as well as adsorbed Na layers deposited on albite and on olivine (a neosilicate that does not contain Na). Sodium at the surface and near surface (<40 Å) was quantified with X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy before and after each irradiation to determine the depletion cross section. We measured a cross section for sputtering of Na adsorbed on mineral surfaces, r s % 1 Â 10 À15 cm 2 atom À1 . In addition, mass spectrometric analyses of the sputtered flux show that a large fraction of the Na is sputtered as ions rather than as neutral atoms. These results have strong implications for modeling the sodium population within the mercurian and the lunar exospheres.


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