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Poro-viscoelastic tidal heating of Io

Hamish C. F. C. Hay*, Ian Hewitt, Marc Rovira-Navarro, Richard F. Katz

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Io’s tidally driven global volcanism indicates widespread partial melting in its mantle. How this melt participates in the interior dynamics and, in particular, the role it plays in tidal dissipation, is poorly understood. We model Io’s tidal deformation by treating its mantle as a two-phase (solid and melt) system. By combining poro-viscous and poro-elastic compaction theories in a Maxwell framework with a consistent model of tidal and self-gravitation, we produce the first self-consistent evaluation of Io’s tidal heating rate due to shearing, compaction and Darcy flow. We find that Darcy dissipation can potentially exceed shear heating, but only for large (0.05–0.2) melt fractions, and if the grain size is large or melt viscosity ultra-low. Since grain sizes larger than 1 cm are unlikely, this suggests that Darcy dissipation is secondary to shear dissipation. Compaction dissipation is maximized when the asthenosphere is highly resistive to isotropic stresses, but contributes at most 1% of Io’s observed heating rate. This work represents a crucial step toward a self-consistent quantitative theory for the dynamics of Io’s partially molten interior.
Original languageEnglish
Article number20250607
JournalProceedings of the Royal Society A - Mathematical, Physical & Engineering Sciences
Volume481
Issue number2324
Early online date29 Oct 2025
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 29 Oct 2025

Keywords

  • Tides
  • Tidal heating
  • Magmatism
  • Poroelasticity
  • Viscous compaction

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