Cratering of the Uranian satellitesAvailable crater counts and their interpretations are reviewed, with emphasis on essential scaling considerations and comparisons with hypotheses developed for interpreting the cratering records on other planets and satellites. New approaches are employed to scaling based on new measurements of crater depths and morphology, which show craters in ice to be unexpectedly different from those in rock. It is found that the published crater counts on the Uranian satellites, despite mutual inconsistencies, can be interpreted as compatible with cratering by the heliocentric population of cometary bodies that was responsible for much of the cratering of the satellites of Jupiter and Saturn. Scaling arguments are applied to the catastrophic breakup of icy satellites and ring particles. The importance of large-scale collisions in disrupting the inner Uranian satellites is found to depend on the shape of the size distribution of cometary bodies at large sizes.
Document ID
19920036092
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Proceedings
Authors
Mckinnon, William B. (Washington University Saint Louis, MO, United States)
Chapman, Clark R. (Planetary Science Institute Tucson, AZ, United States)
Housen, Kevin R. (Boeing Aerospace Co. Seattle, WA, United States)