4.5 Article

Resurfacing processes constrained by crater distribution on Ryugu

Journal

ICARUS
Volume 377, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.icarus.2022.114911

Keywords

Asteroids; Surfaces; Cratering; Regoliths

Funding

  1. KAKENHI from the Japanese Society for Promotion of Science (JSPS) [JP17H01175, JP20H00194, JP19K14778, JP20H04607]
  2. JSPS
  3. International Graduate Program for Excellence in Earth-Space Science (IGPEES) from the University of Tokyo
  4. French space agency
  5. CNES
  6. European Union [870377]
  7. Academies of Excellence: Complex systems and Space, environment, risk, and resilience, part of the IDEX JEDI of the Universite Cote d'Azur

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Understanding the geological modification processes on asteroids is crucial for understanding their surface evolution. Recent experiments have shown that seismic shaking may not play a significant role in modifying the geology of asteroids. Further analysis indicates that seismic shaking models cannot explain the distribution of craters on small asteroids.
Understanding the geological modification processes on asteroids is fundamental for elucidating their surface evolution. Images of small asteroids from spacecrafts show a depletion in smaller craters. Seismic shaking was considered to be responsible for erasing such small craters and the main driver modifying the geology of asteroids. However, a recent artificial impact experiment on asteroid Ryugu conducted by the Japanese Hayabusa2 spacecraft revealed minimal seismic efficiency on the asteroid. To investigate whether a standard seismic shaking model can reproduce the observed crater record, we analyzed the crater distributions on four asteroids, i.e., Eros, Itokawa, Ryugu, and Bennu, using crater production functions under cohesionless conditions. Crater retention ages were estimated as a function of crater diameter for the four asteroids using the crater size-frequency distribution and crater production function estimated for each asteroid. We obtained the relation between a crater retention age t and crater diameter D in the form of power-law function (t proportional to D-a). We found that the power-law indices a are inconsistent with diffusion processes (e.g., seismic shaking, where a = 2). This result suggests that seismic shaking models based on a linear diffusion equation cannot explain the crater distribution on the small asteroids. Alternative crater obliteration processes include surface flows suggested by geomorphological and spectral features of Ryugu. Using the crater statistics, we also show that the vertical mixing of the Ryugu material at the depths shallower than 1 m occurs in 10(3)-10(5) yr by cratering. This rapid resurfacing and replacement of the surface layer in the short timescale would account for the decrease in space weathering rate suggested by previous studies. Furthermore, the timescale required for vertically transporting Ryugu materials to the depths of 2-4 m (10(4)-10(6) yr), where cosmic rays would not reach, can be compared with the cosmic-ray exposure ages of returned samples. This comparison can be used to constrain the distribution of impactors that collide with Ryugu.

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