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Resurfacing processes constrained by crater distribution on Ryugu

Authors :
Takaki, Naofumi
Cho, Yuichiro
Morota, Tomokatsu
Tatsumi, Eri
Honda, Rie
Kameda, Shingo
Yokota, Yasuhiro
Sakatani, Naoya
Kouyama, Toru
Hayakawa, Masahiko
Matsuoka, Moe
Yamada, Manabu
Honda, Chikatoshi
Suzuki, Hidehiko
Yoshioka, Kazuo
Ogawa, Kazunori
Sawada, Hirotaka
Michel, Patrick
Sugita, Seiji
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Understanding the geological modification processes on asteroids can provide information concerning their surface history. Images of small asteroids from spacecraft show a depletion in terms of smaller craters. Seismic shaking was considered to be responsible for crater erasure and the main driver modifying the geology of asteroids via regolith convection or the Brazil nut effect. However, a recent artificial impact experiment on the asteroid Ryugu by the Japanese Hayabusa2 mission revealed minimal seismic activity. To investigate whether a seismic shaking model can reproduce the observed crater record, the crater distribution on Ryugu was analyzed using crater production functions under cohesionless conditions. Crater retention ages were estimated as a function of crater diameter for Ryugu, Itokawa, Eros, and Bennu using the crater size-frequency distribution and crater production function estimated for those asteroids. We found that the power-law indices "a" are inconsistent with diffusion processes (e.g., seismic shaking, a=2). This result suggests that seismic shaking models based on diffusion equations cannot explain the crater distribution on small asteroids. Alternative processes include surface flows, possibly at the origin of geomorphological and spectral features of Ryugu. We demonstrate that the vertical mixing of material at depths shallower than 1 m occurs over 10^3-10^5 yr by cratering and obliteration. The young surface age of Ryugu is consistent with the slow space weathering that results from cratering, as suggested in previous studies. The timescale (10^4-10^6 yr) required for resurfacing at depths of 2-4 m can be compared with the cosmic-ray exposure ages of returned samples to constrain the distribution of impactors that collide with Ryugu.<br />Comment: 30 pages, 9 figures, 2 tables. Submitted to Icarus

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2112.14096
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.icarus.2022.114911