Japan Geoscience Union Meeting 2021

Presentation information

[E] Poster

P (Space and Planetary Sciences ) » P-PS Planetary Sciences

[P-PS03] Regolith Science

Sat. Jun 5, 2021 5:15 PM - 6:30 PM Ch.02

convener:Koji Wada(Planetary Exploration Research Center, Chiba Institute of Technology), Akiko Nakamura(Graduate School of Science, Kobe University), Patrick Michel(Universite Cote D Azur Observatoire De La Cote D Azur CNRS Laboratoire Lagrange), John Kevin Walsh(Southwest Research Institute Boulder)

5:15 PM - 6:30 PM

[PPS03-P04] Ryugu's surface change formed by SCI forward debris

*Yuri Shimaki1, Yasuhiro Yokota1, Rie Honda2, Masahiko Arakawa3, Koji Wada4, Toshihiko Kadono5, Kei Shirai3, Kazunori Ogawa6, Naoya Sakatani7, Ko Ishibashi4, Takanao saiki1, Hiroshi Imamura1, Satoru Nakazawa1, Masahiko Hayakawa1, Hajime Yano1, Yasuhiko Takagi8, Naru Hirata9, Hirotaka Sawada1, Seiji Sugita10, Tomokatsu Morota10, Shingo Kameda7, Eri Tatsumi11, Manabu Yamada4, Toru Kouyama12, Yuichiro Cho10, Moe Matsuoka1, Kazuo Yoshioka10, Hidehiko Suzuki13, Chikatoshi Honda9 (1.Institute of Space and Astronautical Science, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, 2.Kochi University, 3.Kobe University, 4.Planetary Exploration Research Center, Chiba Institute of Technology, 5.University of Occupational and Environmental Health, 6.JAXA Space Exploration Center, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, 7.Rikkyo University, 8.Aichi Toho University, 9.The University of Aizu, 10.The University of Tokyo, 11.Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias, University of La Laguna, 12.National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, 13.Meiji University)

Keywords:Hayabusa2, Crater formation, Asteroid Ryugu

The small carry-on impactor (SCI) on the Hayabusa2 spacecraft is designed to create an artificial crater on an asteroid surface for the collection of sub-surface materials and validation of crater scaling laws [1]. The SCI launches a hollow hemisphere copper liner with a diameter of 13 cm at a velocity of 2 km/s, accompanied by numerous debris [2]. In the ground tests, the SCI forward debris generated concentric damage on the target surface. The SCI successfully created an artificial crater on the surface of Ryugu in 2019 [3]. Besides the artificial crater, surface changes around the crater, such as rim formation, boulder movement, and the emergence of new boulders were observed by the optical navigation camera telescope (ONC-T) [4]. Additionally, concentric surface changes were observed ~70 m distance from the artificial crater, created by the SCI forward debris. Here we report the distribution of the surface changes formed by the SCI forward debris both in the ground test and Ryugu. Based on the SCI detonation position [5], we found that the polar angle of the forward debris in the ground tests is ~11°, whereas that in Ryugu is ~15°, probably due to the absence of ambient pressure.

[1] Arakawa et al. (2017), Space Science Review 208, 187–212. [2] Saiki et al. (2017), Space Science Review 208, 165–186. [3] Arakawa et al. (2020), Science 368, 67-71. [4] Honda et al., submitted to Icarus. [5] Saiki et al. (2020), Astrodynamics 4, 289–308.