The Formation of Terraces on Asteroid (101955) Bennu
- Creators
- Barnouin, O. S.
- Daly, M. G.
- Seabrook, J. A.
- Zhang, Y.
- Thuillet, F.
- Michel, P.
- Roberts, J. H.
- Daly, R. T.
- Perry, M. E.
- Susorney, H. C. M.
- Jawin, E. R.
- Ballouz, R. -L.
- Walsh, K. J.
- Sevalia, M. M.
- Al Asad, M. M.
- Johnson, C. L.
- Bierhaus, E. B.
- Gaskell, R. W.
- Palmer, E. E.
- Weirich, J.
- Rizk, B.
- Drouet d'Aubigny, C. Y.
- Nolan, M. C.
- Dellagiustina, D. N.
- Scheeres, D. J.
- Mcmahon, J. W.
- Connolly, H. C.
- Richardson, D. C.
- Wolner, C. W. V.
- Lauretta, D. S.
Description
The surface of the rubble-pile asteroid (101955) Bennu has been characterized in detail by the OSIRIS-REx (Origins, Spectral Interpretation, Resource Identification, and Security-Regolith Explorer) mission. By examining global and local digital terrain models, we observed that Bennu possesses terraces, that is, a series of roughly latitude-parallel, step-like slope breaks. These partially circumscribe the poles and extend east-west over several longitudinal quadrants at mid- to high (≥30°) latitudes. The terraces are subtle in amplitude, with heights ranging from 1 to 5 m. They often exhibit back-wasting that results in V-shaped scarps that open downslope in some locations. When boulders >5-10 m are absent at or near a terrace, the steeper portion (the drop) of the terrace lacks rocks, whereas the flatter portion (the bench) of the terrace has accumulations of rocks at its crest. When boulders >5-10 m are present, their steep downslope faces often make up the drop from the terrace crest, and they retain debris upslope, thereby enhancing the terrace structure. A geotechnical stability analysis indicates that Bennu's surface is likely unstable and that surface cohesion is <0.6 Pa. Bennu's terraces strongly resemble scarps generated in laboratory and numerical simulations of a cohesionless granular bed as the slope of the bed increases quasi-statically. We conclude that terraces are probably actively forming on Bennu as its surface slowly fails owing to creep induced by spin acceleration.
Abstract
International audience
Additional details
- URL
- https://hal-insu.archives-ouvertes.fr/insu-03656900
- URN
- urn:oai:HAL:insu-03656900v1
- Origin repository
- UNICA