Asteroid shapes and hydration levels can serve as tracers of their history and origin. For instance, the asteroids (162173) Ryugu and (101955) Bennu have an oblate spheroidal shape with a pronounced equator, but contain different surface hydration levels. Here we show, through numerical simulations of large asteroid disruptions, that oblate spheroids, some of which have a pronounced equator defining a spinning top shape, can form directly through gravitational reaccumulation. We further show that rubble piles formed in a single disruption can have similar porosities but variable degrees of hydration. The direct formation of top shapes from single disruption alone can explain the relatively old crater-retention ages of the equatorial features of Ryugu and Bennu. Two separate parent-body disruptions are not necessarily required to explain their different hydration levels.
CITATION STYLE
Michel, P., Ballouz, R. L., Barnouin, O. S., Jutzi, M., Walsh, K. J., May, B. H., … Lauretta, D. S. (2020). Collisional formation of top-shaped asteroids and implications for the origins of Ryugu and Bennu. Nature Communications, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-16433-z
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.