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The spatial distribution of impact craters on Ryugu

Authors :
Hirata, Naoyuki
Morota, Tomokatsu
Cho, Yuichiro
Kanamaru, Masanori
Watanabe, Sei-ichiro
Sugita, Seiji
Hirata, Naru
Yamamoto, Yukio
Noguchi, Rina
Shimaki, Yuri
Tatsumi, Eri
Yoshioka, Kazuo
Sawada, Hirotaka
Yokota, Yasuhiro
Sakatani, Naoya
Hayakawa, Masahiko
Matsuoka, Moe
Honda, Rie
Kameda, Shingo
Yamada, Mamabu
Kouyama, Toru
Suzuki, Hidehiko
Honda, Chikatoshi
Ogawa, Kazunori
Tsuda, Yuichi
Yoshikawa, Makoto
Saiki, Takanao
Tanaka, Satoshi
Terui, Fuyuto
Nakazawa, Satoru
Kikuchi, Shota
Yamaguchi, Tomohiro
Ogawa, Naoko
Ono, Go
Mimasu, Yuya
Yoshikawa, Kent
Takahashi, Tadateru
Takei, Yuto
Fujii, Atsushi
Takeuchi, Hiroshi
Okada, Tatsuaki
Shirai, Kei
Iijima, Yu-ichi
Source :
Icarus Volume 338, 1 March 2020, 113527
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Asteroid 162173 Ryugu has numerous craters. The initial measurement of impact craters on Ryugu, by Sugita et al. (2019), is based on Hayabusa2 ONC images obtained during the first month after the arrival of Hayabusa2 in June 2018. Utilizing new images taken until February 2019, we constructed a global impact crater catalogue of Ryugu, which includes all craters larger than 20 m in diameter on the surface of Ryugu. As a result, we identified 77 craters on the surface of Ryugu. Ryugu shows variation in crater density which cannot be explained by the randomness of cratering; there are more craters at lower latitudes and fewer at higher latitudes, and fewer craters in the western bulge (160 E - 290 E) than in the region around the meridian (300 E - 30 E). This variation implies a complicated geologic history for Ryugu. It seems that the longitudinal variation in crater density simply indicates variation in the crater ages; the cratered terrain around the meridian seems to be geologically old while the western bulge is relatively young. The latitudinal variation in crater density suggests that the equatorial ridge of Ryugu is a geologically old structure; however, this could be alternatively explained by a collision with many fission fragments during a short rotational period of Ryugu in the past.<br />Comment: 18 pages 3 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Icarus Volume 338, 1 March 2020, 113527
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2205.05818
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.icarus.2019.113527