Collisions between planetesimals were common during the first approximately 100 Myr of solar system formation. Such collisions have been suggested to be responsible for thermal processing seen in some meteorites, although previous work has demonstrated that such events could not be responsible for the global thermal evolution of a meteorite parent body. At this early epoch in solar system history, however, meteorite parent bodies would have been heated or retained heat from the decay of short-lived radionuclides, most notably 26Al. The postimpact structure of an impacted body is shown here to be a strong function of the internal temperature structure of the target body. We calculate the temperature-time history of all mass in these impacted bodies, accounting for their heating in an onion-shell-structured body prior to the collision event and then allowing for the postimpact thermal evolution as heat from both radioactivities and the impact is diffused through the resulting planetesimal and radiated to space. The thermal histories of materials in these bodies are compared with what they would be in an unimpacted, onion-shell body. We find that while collisions in the early solar system led to the heating of a target body around the point of impact, a greater amount of mass had its cooling rates accelerated as a result of the flow of heated materials to the surface during the cratering event. © The Meteoritical Society, 2013.
CITATION STYLE
Ciesla, F. J., Davison, T. M., Collins, G. S., & O’Brien, D. P. (2013). Thermal consequences of impacts in the early solar system. Meteoritics and Planetary Science, 48(12), 2559–2576. https://doi.org/10.1111/maps.12236
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