4.5 Article

The thermo-chemical evolution of Asteroid 21 Lutetia

Journal

ICARUS
Volume 224, Issue 1, Pages 126-143

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.icarus.2013.02.025

Keywords

Accretion; Asteroids, Composition; Interiors; Planetary formation; Planetesimals

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) [1385]
  2. Helmholtz Association through the research alliance Planetary Evolution and Life

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In the present study, we model the thermo-chemical evolution of Asteroid 21 Lutetia using new data obtained by the Rosetta flyby in July 2010. We investigate the dependence of the evolution on the accretion onset time and duration for both instantaneous accretion and continuous accretion scenarios, assuming late runaway material accumulation. The thermo-chemical evolution model considers accretion, sintering (hot pressing), melting and differentiation by porous flow. The evolution scenarios arising from assumptions on the macroporosity phi(m) are examined to derive implications on the compaction of an initially highly porous material, (partial) differentiation and the internal structure. The calculated final structures are compared with the observational data to derive bounds on the present-day macroporosity of Lutetia. Varying the macroporosity phi(m), we calculate the initial material properties such as intrinsic density, composition, and radiogenic heat source abundance, assuming an enstatitic origin of Lutetia's primordial material. We obtain a number of possible compaction and differentiation scenarios consistent with the properties of the present-day Lutetia. The most probable macroporosity for a Lutetia-like body with the observed bulk density of 3400 kg m(-3) is phi(m) >= 0.04. Small changes can be expected if an error of +/- 300 kg m(-3) in the bulk density is considered. Depending on the adopted value of phi(m), Lutetia may have formed contemporaneously with the calcium-aluminium-rich inclusions (CAIs) (phi(m) = 0.04) or up to 8 Ma later (phi(m) = 0.25). We find a differentiated interior, i.e., an iron-rich core and silicate mantle, only for a rather narrow interval between 0.04 <= phi(m) < 0.06 with the formation times between 0 Ma and 1.8 Ma after the CAIs. Regardless of melting and partial differentiation, no melt extrusion through the porous layer is likely, which is consistent with the lack of basalt at the surface of Lutetia. For phi(m) >= 0.6, an iron-silicate differentiation is not possible, but the interior is compacted due to sintering below a porous outer layer. (C) 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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