4:45 PM - 5:00 PM
[PPS03-05] Distribution of fractures on boulders on (101955) Bennu and their implication for asteroid surface evolutionary processes.
Keywords:Asteroids, Evolutionary processes, Remote sensing observations
The study of the morphology of boulder fractures, broken boulder arrangements, and the orientation and spatial density of fractured boulders (Eppes et al., 2019) may clarify the processes that act on the surface of a planet or small body. Moreover, when a weathering process creates fractures, their spatial density and the distribution of the fractured to non-fractured boulder ratio may shed light on relative surface unit ages.
Here we report on the identification and mapping of fractures on Bennu’s boulders using the mosaics of images of the surfaces of Bennet et al. (2020). We globally covered the surface between -50 and 50 degrees of latitude, mapping fractures on boulders of different type and size. We will show that the global distribution of fractures is consistent with their propagation caused by diurnal temperature variations. We will also describe our attempt to model the fracture propagation in order to assess the time it took to form the observed ones. In combination with other OSIRIS-REx science results (e.g. Jawin et al. 2020), this modelling allowed us to estimate the rate of the thermal fracturing process. We argue that this process is general on those carbonaceous asteroids similar to Bennu and an important phenomenon for sculpting the surfaces of these bodies.
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