Reaccumulation process after a catastrophic disruption event on a differentiated asteroid
Kenji Kurosaki, Masahiko Arakawa
TLDR
Simulations reveal iron-rich rubble-pile asteroids form from catastrophic disruption of differentiated bodies with molten cores, creating mixed fragments.
Key contributions
- Simulations show catastrophic disruption of differentiated asteroids creates mixed core/mantle fragments with similar iron-rock ratios.
- Iron-rich rubble-pile asteroids form from these mixed fragments, but only if the original body's iron core was molten.
- Fragment production is sensitive to material strength, with solid core strength suppressing catastrophic disruption.
Why it matters
This research provides a unified framework for understanding the formation of metal-rich asteroids like (16) Psyche and (22) Kalliope. It offers testable predictions for NASA's Psyche mission regarding surface and internal structure.
Original Abstract
Rubble-pile asteroids can form through the self-gravitational reaccumulation of fragments produced during large-scale collisions. To investigate how differentiated bodies are disrupted and how iron-rich rubble piles may form, we performed smoothed particle hydrodynamics simulations of impacts between differentiated asteroids with molten or solidified interiors. Our results show that catastrophic disruption produces a sheet-like structure in which core and mantle materials are stretched and subsequently fragment under self-gravity. The resulting fragments exhibit nearly identical iron-rock mass ratios, indicating that catastrophic disruption naturally generates numerous compositionally similar fragments. The largest remnant formed in such events is therefore an iron-rich rubble pile assembled from these mixed fragments, whereas remnants formed through mantle stripping retain a layered structure with an iron core and rocky mantle. We further find that fragment production is sensitive to material strength and the equation of state: mantle strength reduces the number of small fragments, while core strength suppresses catastrophic disruption when the core is solid. These results imply that iron-rich rubble-pile asteroids can form only when the iron core is molten. Our findings provide a unified framework for the formation of metal-rich asteroids such as (16) Psyche and the (22) Kalliope system, and offer predictions for the surface and internal structure that the NASA Psyche mission may test.
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