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Talk of the "International Workshop on Paolo Farinella (1953-2000): the Scientists, the man", Pisa, 14-16 June 2010
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Clark R. ChapmanClark R. ChapmanSouthwest Research InstituteSouthwest Research Institute
Boulder, Colorado, USABoulder, Colorado, USA
Session: “Planetary Science: Small Bodies, Collisions, and Satellites I”
International Workshop on Paolo Farinella(1953-2000): The Scientist and the Man
11:50, 15 June 2010University of Pisa, Italy
Session: Session: ““Planetary Science: Small Bodies, Planetary Science: Small Bodies, Collisions, and Satellites ICollisions, and Satellites I””
International Workshop on Paolo International Workshop on Paolo FarinellaFarinella(1953(1953--2000): The Scientist and the Man2000): The Scientist and the Man
11:50, 15 June 201011:50, 15 June 2010University of Pisa, ItalyUniversity of Pisa, Italy
Puzzling Attributes of Puzzling Attributes of Small AsteroidsSmall Asteroids
Pat Rawlings, SAICPat Rawlings, SAIC
Paolo Attacked Puzzles…
Double asteroids don’t match double craters
Space weathering is very fast, yet very slow
2008 TC3 was a 3 meter jumble of meteorite types
NEAs in microgravity
I’ll Discuss a Few More:I’ll Discuss a Few More:
Doublet Craters: History of Topic “Martian doublet craters,” V.R. Oberbeck & M. Aoyagi, J. Geophys.
Res., 77, 2419 - 2432 (1972). 1978: Woronow inconclusively debated Oberbeck about whether
spatial randomness was correctly modeled. Conclusion back then:Mars may or may not have an over-abundance of paired craters.
Topic resurrected in 1991 by Melosh & Stansberry who argued that 3 doublets on Earth must have been formed by impact of binary asteroids (this was before any asteroid satellites had been discovered).
Farinella & Chauvineau (1993): slow synchronized spinning binaries would be at correct separation for doublet craters; binaries might later separate or, more likely, coalesce into contact-binary configuration (common in radar delay-Doppler images of NEAs).
In 1990s, Melosh, Bottke, Cook, et al. re-examined Martian doublets and extended the analysis of doublets to Venus.
Dactyl was discovered and the tidally disrupted SL-9 comet impacted Jupiter, so doublet/multiple craters were analyzed in that context.
Methods of Forming Doublets Random impacts (unavoidable) Very oblique impacts, ricochet
(Messier, Messier A) Endogenic crater formation
(volcanoes, collapse pits, etc.) Atmospheric break-up, explosion
(Henbury) Tidal break-up (Shoemaker-Levy 9) Spatially clustered secondaries Impact of binary asteroid or comet
How to Recognize Doublets The certain way
Adjacent craters with same measured ages (Earth only)
Overlapping craters with shared walls (septum)
The very likely way Adjacent craters with similar
relative ages Other unusual similarities
indicating, e.g., same oblique impact angle
The statistical approach Find a greater abundance of
doublets than predicted by chance (doesn’t say which ones are the true doublets, unless the characteristics are very unusual)
Observed Frequencies of Doublets on Several Planets
Earth 3 pairs among 28 craters > 20 km diameter;
statistically significant because of very sparse crater densities on Earth and same ages
Mars Melosh et al. (1996) studied 133 craters on
northern plains, 5-100 km diam., and found 3 likely pairs with separations exceeding random expectations 2.3% doublets, less than on Earth and Venus
Venus Cook, Melosh & Bottke (2003) found 2.2% of 10
toto 150 km diameter craters were doublets, but that “splotches” (due to smaller impactorsunable to penetrate the Venus atmosphere) imply ~14% doublets on Venus
Moon, Mercury, planetary satellites I’ve found no definitive studies But doublets exist (Moon; Mercury )
NEA Binaries are too Close to Make Doublets
Separation can be larger for oblique impacts
Separation of craters can be zero if pair are un-favorably aligned, even if widely separated
Tidal forces can affect separation
Main Issue:Main Issue:Impacting Impacting NEAsNEAs form craters 10 form craters 10 –– 20 20 times their own diameter. Most NEA times their own diameter. Most NEA pairs are so close that, even with pairs are so close that, even with favorable geometry, they form a favorable geometry, they form a single crater. How can there be so single crater. How can there be so many doublet craters?many doublet craters?
Perihelion (AU)
Walsh (2009)
Plot shows that typical Plot shows that typical separation of satellites and separation of satellites and binaries is about 4 times the binaries is about 4 times the radius of the primary.radius of the primary.
Only 1 out of the sample of 35 Only 1 out of the sample of 35 is separated widely enough is separated widely enough (~15 times primary radius) to (~15 times primary radius) to produce a double crater.produce a double crater.
~15% of ~15% of NEAsNEAs have satellites have satellites or are binaries so <0.5% of or are binaries so <0.5% of craters made by craters made by NEAsNEAs should should be visibly double.be visibly double.
Space Weathering is Fast… Or is it? (It is a Puzzle!)
“Space weathering” is the process that transforms the spectral reflectance (colors and albedo) of the surface of an airless body by reddening and/or darkening it (mainly by solar wind; also micrometeorite impacts).
Vernazza et al. (2009) study dynamically very young family asteroids and find that most space weathering color changes occur in ~1 million yrs.
Following a suggestion of Nesvorny et al. (2005), Binzel et al. (2010) find that frequent, distant tidal encounters with Earth by NEAs produce color changes (tidal rejuvenation of surfaces?). Few NEAs (or MBAs) are Q’s. [Can YORP spin-up help?]
Yet bright crater rays persist for 100s of m.y. Rays from Tycho crater on the Moon (~100 m.y.
old) dominate the full Moon Copernicus rays are still prominent after 800 m.y.
Mercury is periodically bombarded by solar wind, yet rays from large, infrequent craters are vivid.
Walsh et al. (2008)Walsh et al. (2008)
Binzel et al. (2010)
2008 TC3: Linking an Asteroid to a Bolide to a Meteorite!
2008 TC3 was the 1st NEA ever discovered (Catalina Sky Survey, 7 Oct. 2008) that was then predicted, for sure, to impact Earth. Telescopic observations were made before impact: lightcurve, reflectance spectrum.
19 h after discovery, impact occurred and was recorded over Sudan; ~700 paired meteorites (named Almahata Sitta) have been collected so far.
This first-ever event was not a fluke: we must expect future (maybe annual) predictions of meteorite strikes, from existing and proposed modest telescopes, without waiting for “next generation” surveys.
But this meteorite is S T R A N G E !
Almahata Sitta fragment on the ground in Sudan (P. Jenniskens)
TC3 atmospheric train (M. Mahir)
TC3 asteroid moving (W. Boschin, TNG)
Catalina Sky Survey
TC3 Reflectance Spectrum: Wm. Herschel Telescope (Fitzsimmons, Hsieh, Duddy & Ramsay)
TC3 Lightcurve (Clay Center Observatory)
TC3 = Almahata Sitta = a Jumble!
Paolo and others have shown how small asteroids and meteorites are produced by collisional disruption of their “parent bodies,” drift into resonances by Yarkovsky, pumped-up e’s then deliver them to Earth.
Almahata Sitta was first thought to be an unusual ureilite. But the 3-meter wide F-type asteroid is only 2/3rd ureilite; 1/3rd consists
of 5 different E chondrite lithologies, 2 H chondrites, and anomalous achondrites (e.g. Bischoff, Horstmann, et al. “LPSC 41” & “Meteoroids 2010” ).
How did this conglomerate breccia come together in the asteroid belt? What would the spectrum of its parent asteroid look like? What held it together (spinning once every 97 sec!) on its way to Earth?
Other processes, not yet understood, must be at work!
Non-Intuitive Processes on Small Asteroids that May Yield Meteorites
Classical/cartoon model: chips from solid rocky asteroids.
1990s model: meteoroids dislodged by cratering events and catastrophic disruptions on “rubble pile” asteroids, drift by Yarkovsky Effect into orbital resonances, and are thereby converted into Earth-crossing orbits.
Very recent alternative (or additional) modes: landslides and equatorial escape after spin-up of “rubble pile” near-Earth asteroids by YORP… or distortion/disruption by planetary tides
Scheeres et al. (2010) propose that NEAs behave in microgravity with the non-intuitive physics that governs microscopic dust aggregates
Once Upon a Time: Collisions Ruled…Now it’s mainly Sunlight and Tides
Interasteroidal collisions (both catastrophic disruptions and frequent, small cratering events) were invoked to explain everything that happened to asteroids after early accretion and thermal processing: size distribution, spin rates and axis tilts, liberation and delivery of smaller asteroids and meteorite fragments into resonances, asteroid satellite formation, regolith properties, etc.
Yarkovsky Effect (reintroduced for 3rd time in the 20th
century by D. Rubincam in 1980s) shown by Farinella, Vokrouhlicky, Bottke and others to cause meteoroids from anywhere in inner half of main asteroid belt to drift into resonances, which deliver them to Earth.
YORP Effect (resurrected from mid-20th century by D. Rubincam in 1998) shown to be the major process shaping the axial tilts and spin rates of smaller asteroids. [Radzievskii 1954: “A mechanism for the disintegration of asteroids and meteorites.”]
These two These two YarkovskyYarkovsky Effects may dominate the Effects may dominate the physical and dynamical behavior of smaller asteroids.physical and dynamical behavior of smaller asteroids.
Tidal MassTidal Mass--SheddingShedding
Following a Following a sugsug--gestiongestion by by NesNes--vornyvorny et alet al., Bin., Bin--zelzel et alet al. (2010) . (2010) show that tidal show that tidal encounters with encounters with Earth (perhaps Earth (perhaps even very distant even very distant ones) “freshen” ones) “freshen” the colors of the the colors of the spacespace--weathered weathered surfaces of surfaces of NEAsNEAs..
YORP Spin-Up, Binary Formation, and Mass Shedding…and Tides…
Arecibo radar data on NEA 66391 (1999 KW4; Ostro et al.), and analyses/modeling by Scheeres, Fahnestock, Walsh, Michel, Richardson, et al. open a new paradigm for the evolution of small rubble piles:
Asymmetric solar radiation spins some of them up, so mass moves to zero-G equatorial ridge, shedding mass, forming satellite/s, escape or reimpact of satellites, and escape of meteoroids into interplanetary space.
~1/3 of NEAs are binaries, or have satellites or contact-binary shapes, implying a common evolutionary track. An NEA may undergo generations of satellite formation during its dynamical life in the inner solar system.
No modeling has yet been done on meteoroid production rates, but this could be a major source of meteorites. CRE ages may reflect such surficiallandslide processes rather than impact-churned regolith processes.
K. Walsh, P. Michel & D. Richardson (2008)K. Walsh, P. Michel & D. Richardson (2008)
Ostro et al. (2006)Ostro et al. (2006)Gravitational slope on KW4-α
How do Small How do Small Asteroids Behave Asteroids Behave in Microgravity?in Microgravity?
What happened What happened to to Itokawa’sItokawa’sdust? What are dust? What are porosities of porosities of NEA’sNEA’s? Are we ? Are we entering a entering a microscopic microscopic world writ large? world writ large? Expect surprise!Expect surprise!
Conclusions…
Intuition from our one-Earth-gravity environment fails us for small solar system bodies
They evolve in their physical traits very quickly…faster than we can understand
We’ve known that we have asteroid pieces (the meteorites) for more than 2 centuries, yet we still don’t understand asteroidalparent bodies
These are the kinds of puzzles Paolo would still be researching, were he still with us.
Example: Rosetta and (21) Lutetia Rosetta flies by 100 km Lutetia in July Arguments abound about meteorite
analog/s for this M(W)-type asteroid “M” is mnemonic for “metal” but
Rivkin (2000) showed that a subset of M’s have a 3µm hydration band (‘Wet’)
Also, I suggested (1970s) that M-like spectra might be enstatite chondrites
But Lutetia was selected as flyby target because of arguments that it may be a carbonaceous chondrite
Relevant data include polarization, visible and radar albedos, thermal IR emission spectra, UV/visible/near-IR reflectance spectra, mass+shape →bulk density
Truth table → “wet” enstatite chondrite Rosetta may yield ambiguous results:
We need a TC3-like-event for an M(W)!
Barucci et al. (2005)
Vernazza et al. (2009)
LutetiaLutetia/meteorite spectral comparisons/meteorite spectral comparisons
Short-Term Warnings: Spaceguard Survey does Better than We Thought!
Was it a miracle that telescopes saw what was plausibly the largest NEA to impact Earth in 2008? No! Capability to see “final plungers” was overlooked.
Analyses in the 1990s of the “Spaceguard Survey” only considered cataloging of near-Earth asteroids (NEAs); short-term warning was evaluated only for rare comets.
Thus it was thought that there was only a tiny chance that a dangerous inbound 30-m NEA would be seen, let alone a 3-m “TC3”.
Short-term hazard warning was evaluated (NASA SDT 2003) for the “next generation” surveys, but not for small NEAs and meteorite recovery.
“Consider a 30–40-m office-building-sized object striking at 100 times the speed of a jetliner…. Even with the proposed augmented Spaceguard Survey, it is unlikely that such a small object would be discovered in advance; impact would occur without warning.” – C. Chapman, EPSL (2004).
“a short lead time for an NEO is extremely unlikely “a short lead time for an NEO is extremely unlikely ––we can expect either decades of warning or none at we can expect either decades of warning or none at all”all” – Morrison, Harris, Sommer, Chapman & Carusi(“Asteroids III” 2002)