NASA Logo

NTRS

NTRS - NASA Technical Reports Server

Advisory – Planned Maintenance: On Monday, July 15 at 9 PM Eastern the STI Compliance and Distribution Services will be performing planned maintenance on the STI Repository (NTRS) for approximately one hour. During this time users will not be able to access the STI Repository (NTRS).

Back to Results
Crater Population on Asteroid (101955) Bennu Indicates Impact Armouring and a Young SurfaceThe impactor-to-crater size scaling relationships that enable estimates of planetary surface ages rely on an accurate formulation of impactor–target physics. An armouring regime, specific to rubble-pile surfaces, has been proposed to occur when an impactor is comparable in diameter to a target surface particle (for example, a boulder). Armouring is proposed to reduce crater diameter, or prevent crater formation in the asteroid surface, at small crater diameters. Here, using measurements of 1,560 craters on the rubble-pile asteroid (101955) Bennu, we show that the boulder population controls a transition from crater formation to armouring at crater diameters ~2–3 m, below which crater formation in the bulk surface is increasingly rare. By combining estimates of impactor flux with the armouring scaling relationship, we find that Bennu’s crater retention age (surface age derived from crater abundance) spans from 1.6–2.2 Myr for craters less than a few meters to ~10–65 Myr for craters >100 m in diameter, reducing the maximum surface age by a factor of >15 relative to previous estimates. The range of crater retention ages, together with latitudinal variations in large-crater spatial density, indicate that ongoing resurfacing processes render the surface many times younger than the bulk asteroid.
Document ID
20220005525
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
E B Bierhaus ORCID
(Lockheed Martin (United States) Bethesda, Maryland, United States)
D Trang ORCID
(University of Hawaii at Manoa Honolulu, Hawaii, United States)
R T Daly ORCID
(Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory North Laurel, Maryland, United States)
C A Bennett ORCID
(University of Arizona Tucson, Arizona, United States)
O S Barnouin ORCID
(Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory North Laurel, Maryland, United States)
K J Walsh ORCID
(Southwest Research Institute San Antonio, Texas, United States)
R -L Ballouz ORCID
(University of Arizona Tucson, Arizona, United States)
W F Bottke ORCID
(Southwest Research Institute San Antonio, Texas, United States)
K N Burke ORCID
(University of Arizona Tucson, Arizona, United States)
M E Perry ORCID
(Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory North Laurel, Maryland, United States)
E R Jawin
(National Museum of Natural History Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States)
T J McCoy
(National Museum of Natural History Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States)
H C Connolly, Jr ORCID
(Rowan University Glassboro, New Jersey, United States)
M G Daly ORCID
(York University Toronto, Ontario, Canada)
J P Dworkin ORCID
(Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, Maryland, United States)
D N DellaGiustina ORCID
(University of Arizona Tucson, Arizona, United States)
P L Gay ORCID
(Planetary Science Institute Tucson, Arizona, United States)
J I Brodbeck
(University of Arizona Tucson, Arizona, United States)
J Nolau
(University of Central Florida Orlando, Florida, United States)
J. Padilla
(University of Arizona Tucson, Arizona, United States)
S Stewart
(University of Arizona Tucson, Arizona, United States)
S Schwartz ORCID
(University of Arizona Tucson, Arizona, United States)
P Michel ORCID
(Observatoire de la Côte d’Azur Nice, France)
M Pajola
(Osservatorio Astronomico di Padova Padova, Italy)
D S Lauretta ORCID
(University of Arizona Tucson, Arizona, United States)
Date Acquired
April 8, 2022
Publication Date
April 7, 2022
Publication Information
Publication: Nature Geoscience
Publisher: Nature Research
Volume: 15
Issue: 6
Issue Publication Date: June 1, 2022
ISSN: 1752-0894
e-ISSN: 1752-0908
Subject Category
Lunar and Planetary Science and Exploration
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 828928.01.02.01.01
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNG12FD66C
CONTRACT_GRANT: SPEC5732
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNM10AA11C
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80NSSC18K0226
CONTRACT_GRANT: EU Horizon 2020 870377
CONTRACT_GRANT: ASI-INAF 2017-37-H.0
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Portions of document may include copyright protected material.
Technical Review
External Peer Committee
Keywords
Asteroids
Comets
Kuiper belt
Geomorphology
Document Inquiry

Available Downloads

There are no available downloads for this record.
No Preview Available