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Cratering on Small Bodies: Lessons from Eros

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How old Eros is since its creation as an independent body or since its last ... Compressive ridge extends around to other side of Eros ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cratering on Small Bodies: Lessons from Eros


1
Cratering on Small Bodies Lessons from Eros
Clark R. Chapman
Southwest Research Institute Boulder, Colorado,
USA
Impact Cratering Bridging the Gap between
Modeling and Observations Lunar Planetary
Inst., Houston, 9 Feb. 2003
2
Goals of Studying Cratering on Eros
Planetary craters provide an historical record.
We must understand not only their formation but
also their degradation and ancillary processes
(e.g. secondary cratering).
  • Chief goal of cratering specialists study
    moderate-scale cratering on a nearly
    gravitationless body
  • Some of my goals
  • Determine projectile population size-distribution
    in main asteroid belt (where Eros lived most of
    its life)
  • Determine cratering age of Eros
  • How old Eros is since its creation as an
    independent body or since its last global
    resurfacing event
  • Evidence (at high res) indicating its duration in
    near-Earth orbit
  • Understand ejecta/secondary cratering processes
  • Understand regolith evolution on a small body
  • Learn (from surface expression) about interior of
    Eros

3
Eros in Context of Asteroids Imaged by Spacecraft
Mathilde
  • Eros is typical in size, though an
    Earth-approacher
  • All are S-types, except C-type Mathilde
    Mathildes unique giant craters are probably due
    to its high porosity/low density
  • Angular Gaspra has low crater density, perhaps
    due to metallic composition
  • Craters similar on Eros Ida

Ida
Gaspra
Eros
4
Some Aspects of the Larger Craters on Eros
  • Two of largest craters (Himeros and Psyche) are
    large relative to the width of Eros
  • Compressive ridge extends around to
    other side of Eros
  • Bowl-shaped Psyche has markedly different
    shape from youngest large crater
    (Shoemaker, not shown here)
  • Bright/dark interior slopes indicate downslope
    slippage, unusual space weathering

5
Eros Surface from Low Orbit
6

Ponds from Low-Altitude Flyover
7
NEAR-Shoemakers Landing Spot on Eros
  • Inset shows Himeros
  • Estimated positions of last images end within a
    50 meter diameter crater
  • How typical is the edge of Himeros of Eros?
  • How typical is Eros of other asteroids?

8

Fifth Last Image (largest boulders are 3
meters across)
9
Eros is Covered with Rocks
10

Final Landing Mosaic
11
Closest Image of Eros
12

Ponds and Beaches?
  • Ponds are flat, level, and are sharply bounded
  • Beaches (not always seen) surround some ponds
    and are relatively lacking in either craters or
    boulders
  • Although stratigraphically younger, ponds may
    have more small craters than typical terrains,
    suggesting that boulders may armor crater
    production
  • How are they formed? Electrostatic levitation,
    seismic shaking? If mass-wasting, why dont
    lunar ponds exist?

13
The Relative Plot (R-Plot)
  • Shows spatial densities of craters as function
    of size relative to saturation

14
R-Plot Eros Craters Boulders
15
Eros R-Plot (annotated)
16
Eros is NOT Like the Moon!
Eros has rocks.
The Moon has craters.
17
Summary of NEA Population Estimates (A. W.
Harris, 2002)
18
Why is Eros so Different from the Moon at Small
Scales?
???
  • Covering-up by mass-wasting, seismic shaking,
    ejecta blanketing -- doesnt work boulders would
    be covered, too.
  • Unless...Shoemaker crater formed yesterday!
  • Armoring by boulders impactors strike but few
    craters are formed -- probably explains factor of
    3we need orders of magnitude (note few craters
    in ponds).
  • Yarkovsky Effect (meteorite-sized bodies depleted
    from asteroid belt, some delivered to Earth) --
    hasnt worked quantitatively, yet.

19
Final Comment...
Cratering on asteroids is unexpectedly weird and
varied
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