4.5 Article

The Internal Structure of Mercury's Core Inferred From Magnetic Observations

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-PLANETS
Volume 126, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2020JE006792

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NASA Discovery Program [NAS5-97271, NASW-00002]
  2. French Agence Nationale de la Rercherche [654 ANR13-BS05-0012]
  3. Centre National des Etudes Spatiales

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By utilizing MESSENGER probe data, the study infers the internal structure of Mercury's core and suggests that the inner core size ranges from 500 to 660 km, with a corresponding stratified layer thickness of 880 to 500 km. The research provides new insights into the core structure of a planet based on magnetic field observations.
Previous models of Mercury's core magnetic field based on high altitude data from first MESSENGER flybys revealed an axisymmetric structure of the field. Here, we use low altitude MESSENGER data covering the entire mission period to construct spherical harmonic models based on various spatial norms. Although we find a dominantly axisymmetric field, our models nevertheless include detectable deviations from axisymmetry. These non-axisymmetric features appear at high latitudes, resembling intense geomagnetic flux patches at Earth's core-mantle boundary. Based on this core field morphology, we then attempt to infer Mercury's internal structure. More specifically, assuming that Mercury's high-latitude non-axisymmetric features are concentrated by downwellings at the edge of the planet's inner core tangent cylinder, and accounting for the presence of a stably stratified layer at the top of Mercury's core, we establish a relation between the inner core size and the thickness of the stratified layer. Considering plausible ranges, we propose that Mercury's inner core size is about 500-660 km, which corresponds to a stratified layer thickness of 880-500 km, respectively. Plain Language Summary Measurements of the magnetic field of Mercury taken by the MESSENGER space probe allow us to construct a model of the magnetic field generated inside Mercury. This internal field is generated within the core of Mercury by a magnetic dynamo process. This field is highly symmetric with respect to the axis of rotation, but very much weaker than Earth's magnetic field. Deviations from the axisymmetry of the field allow us to infer the internal structure of Mercury's core. A combined interpretation of Mercury's gravity field observations and our results provide a certain range for Mercury's inner core size, which is likely to be solid. We also infer the size of Mercury's dynamo and the thickness of the stratified layer above the dynamo region. We find that Mercury's inner core size is about 500-660 km, which corresponds to a stratified layer thickness of 880-500 km, respectively. The size of the dynamo region is between 680 and 900 km. This study provides new insights to the internal structure of a planet's core that are inferred from observations of its magnetic field.

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