Title of article :
Size–frequency distributions of fragments from SPH/N-body simulations of asteroid impacts: Comparison with observed asteroid families
Author/Authors :
Durda، نويسنده , , Daniel D. and Bottke Jr.، نويسنده , , William F. and Nesvorn‎، نويسنده , , David and Enke، نويسنده , , Brian L. and Merline، نويسنده , , William J. and Asphaug، نويسنده , , Erik and Richardson، نويسنده , , Derek C.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages :
19
From page :
498
To page :
516
Abstract :
We investigate the morphology of size–frequency distributions (SFDs) resulting from impacts into 100-km-diameter parent asteroids, represented by a suite of 161 SPH/N-body simulations conducted to study asteroid satellite formation [Durda, D.D., Bottke, W.F., Enke, B.L., Merline, W.J., Asphaug, E., Richardson, D.C., Leinhardt, Z.M., 2004. Icarus 170, 243–257]. The spherical basalt projectiles range in diameter from 10 to 46 km (in equally spaced mass increments in logarithmic space, covering six discrete sizes), impact speeds range from 2.5 to 7 km/s (generally in 1 km/s increments), and impact angles range from 15° to 75° (nearly head-on to very oblique) in 15° increments. These modeled SFD morphologies match very well the observed SFDs of many known asteroid families. We use these modeled SFDs to scale to targets both larger and smaller than 100 km in order to gain insights into the circumstances of the impacts that formed these families. Some discrepancies occur for families with parent bodies smaller than a few tens of kilometers in diameter (e.g., 832 Karin), however, so due caution should be used in applying our results to such small families. We find that ∼20 observed main-belt asteroid families are produced by the catastrophic disruption of D > 100  km parent bodies. Using these data as constraints, collisional modeling work [Bottke Jr., W.F., Durda, D.D., Nesvorný, D., Jedicke, R., Morbidelli, A., Vokrouhlický, D., Levison, H.F., 2005b. Icarus 179, 63–94] suggests that the threshold specific energy, Q D ∗ , needed to eject 50% of the target bodyʹs mass is very close to that predicted by Benz and Asphaug [Benz, W., Asphaug, E., 1999. Icarus 142, 5–20].
Keywords :
Collisional physics , Impact processes , Asteroids
Journal title :
Icarus
Serial Year :
2007
Journal title :
Icarus
Record number :
2374208
Link To Document :
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