Implications of cohesive strength in asteroid interiors and surfaces and its measurement

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Abstract

Recent observations and theory have indicated that rubble pile asteroids may have a small, but finite, level of tensile strength, allowing them to spin above their spin deformation limit as defined in Holsapple (Icarus 205:430–442, 2010). In Sánchez and Scheeres (Meteorit Planet Sci 49:788–811, 2014), a theory for how such strength could be present in rubble pile asteroids was presented, relying on weak van der Waals forces between fine particulate material in asteroid regolith and in their interiors. The implications of this theory are evaluated and related to the surface strength of regolith and global strength of a rubble pile body. Proposed techniques to measure the strength of regolith using cratering theory are reviewed, as are constraints placed on the global strength of rubble pile asteroids from astronomical observations. Specific examples applied to the Hayabusa2 cratering experiment at its target asteroid are given. [Figure not available: see fulltext.].

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Scheeres, D. J., & Sánchez, P. (2018). Implications of cohesive strength in asteroid interiors and surfaces and its measurement. Progress in Earth and Planetary Science, 5(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s40645-018-0182-9

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