| Literature DB >> 32214245 |
Tatsuaki Okada1,2, Tetsuya Fukuhara3, Satoshi Tanaka4,5,6, Makoto Taguchi3, Takehiko Arai7, Hiroki Senshu8, Naoya Sakatani4, Yuri Shimaki4, Hirohide Demura9, Yoshiko Ogawa9, Kentaro Suko9, Tomohiko Sekiguchi10, Toru Kouyama11, Jun Takita12, Tsuneo Matsunaga13, Takeshi Imamura6, Takehiko Wada4, Sunao Hasegawa4, Jörn Helbert14, Thomas G Müller15, Axel Hagermann16, Jens Biele17, Matthias Grott14, Maximilian Hamm14,18, Marco Delbo19, Naru Hirata9, Naoyuki Hirata20, Yukio Yamamoto4,5, Seiji Sugita21,8, Noriyuki Namiki5,22, Kohei Kitazato9, Masahiko Arakawa20, Shogo Tachibana4,21, Hitoshi Ikeda23, Masateru Ishiguro24, Koji Wada8, Chikatoshi Honda9, Rie Honda25, Yoshiaki Ishihara13, Koji Matsumoto5,22, Moe Matsuoka4, Tatsuhiro Michikami26, Akira Miura4, Tomokatsu Morota21, Hirotomo Noda22, Rina Noguchi4, Kazunori Ogawa20,27, Kei Shirai20, Eri Tatsumi21,28, Hikaru Yabuta29, Yasuhiro Yokota4, Manabu Yamada8, Masanao Abe4,5, Masahiko Hayakawa4, Takahiro Iwata4,5, Masanobu Ozaki4,5, Hajime Yano4,5, Satoshi Hosoda4, Osamu Mori4, Hirotaka Sawada4, Takanobu Shimada4, Hiroshi Takeuchi4,5, Ryudo Tsukizaki4, Atsushi Fujii4, Chikako Hirose23, Shota Kikuchi4, Yuya Mimasu4, Naoko Ogawa4,27, Go Ono23, Tadateru Takahashi4,30, Yuto Takei4, Tomohiro Yamaguchi4,31, Kent Yoshikawa23, Fuyuto Terui4, Takanao Saiki4, Satoru Nakazawa4, Makoto Yoshikawa4,5, Seiichiro Watanabe4,32, Yuichi Tsuda4,5.
Abstract
Carbonaceous (C-type) asteroids1 are relics of the early Solar System that have preserved primitive materials since their formation approximately 4.6 billion years ago. They are probably analogues of carbonaceous chondrites2,3 and are essential for understanding planetary formation processes. However, their physical properties remain poorly known because carbonaceous chondrite meteoroids tend not to survive entry to Earth's atmosphere. Here we report on global one-rotation thermographic images of the C-type asteroid 162173 Ryugu, taken by the thermal infrared imager (TIR)4 onboard the spacecraft Hayabusa25, indicating that the asteroid's boulders and their surroundings have similar temperatures, with a derived thermal inertia of about 300 J m-2 s-0.5 K-1 (300 tiu). Contrary to predictions that the surface consists of regolith and dense boulders, this low thermal inertia suggests that the boulders are more porous than typical carbonaceous chondrites6 and that their surroundings are covered with porous fragments more than 10 centimetres in diameter. Close-up thermal images confirm the presence of such porous fragments and the flat diurnal temperature profiles suggest a strong surface roughness effect7,8. We also observed in the close-up thermal images boulders that are colder during the day, with thermal inertia exceeding 600 tiu, corresponding to dense boulders similar to typical carbonaceous chondrites6. These results constrain the formation history of Ryugu: the asteroid must be a rubble pile formed from impact fragments of a parent body with microporosity9 of approximately 30 to 50 per cent that experienced a low degree of consolidation. The dense boulders might have originated from the consolidated innermost region or they may have an exogenic origin. This high-porosity asteroid may link cosmic fluffy dust to dense celestial bodies10.Year: 2020 PMID: 32214245 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-2102-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962