Abstract
Asteroid 4 Vesta is the only currently identified asteroid for which we
possess samples in the form of meteorites. These meteorites revealed us
that Vesta is a differentiated body and that its differentiation
produced a relatively thin basaltic crust that survived intact over its
entire collisional history. The survival of the vestan basaltic crust
has long been identified as a pivotal constraint in the study of the
evolution of the asteroid belt and the Solar System but, while we
possess a reasonably good picture of the effects of the last 4 Ga on
such a crust, little is known about the effects of earlier events like
the Late Heavy Bombardment. In this work we address this gap in our
knowledge by simulating the Late Heavy Bombardment on Vesta in the
different dynamical scenarios proposed for the migration of the giant
planets in the broad framework of the Nice Model. The results of the
simulations allowed us to assess the collisional history of the asteroid
during the Late Heavy Bombardment in terms of produced crater
population, surface saturation, mass loss and mass gain of Vesta and
number of energetic or catastrophic impacts. Our results reveal that
planet-planet scattering is a dynamically favorable migration mechanism
for the survival of Vesta and its crust. The number of impacts of
asteroids larger than about 1 km in diameter estimated as due to the LHB
is 31 ± 5, i.e. about 5 times larger than the number of impacts
that would have occurred in an unperturbed main belt in the same time
interval. The contribution of a possible extended belt to the
collisional evolution of Vesta during the LHB is quite limited and can
be quantified in 2 ± 1 impacts of asteroids with diameter greater
than or equal to 1 km. The chance of energetic and catastrophic impacts
is less than 10% and is compatible with the absence of giant craters
dated back to 4 Ga ago and with the survival of the asteroid during the
Late Heavy Bombardment. The mass loss caused by the bombardment
translates in the erosion of 3 - 5 m of the crust, consistently with
the global survival of the basaltic crust of Vesta confirmed by the Dawn
mission. Our analysis revealed that the contribution of the LHB to the
cratering of Vesta' surface is not significant and is actually erased by
the crater population produced by the following 4 Ga of collisional
evolution of the asteroid, in agreement with the data provided by the
Dawn mission.
Originalsprog | Engelsk |
---|---|
Tidsskrift | Icarus |
Vol/bind | 271 |
Sider (fra-til) | 170-179 |
ISSN | 0019-1035 |
DOI | |
Status | Udgivet - 2016 |
Udgivet eksternt | Ja |