Cratering on Ceres: Implications for its crust and evolution

Author:

Hiesinger H.1,Marchi S.2,Schmedemann N.3,Schenk P.4,Pasckert J. H.1,Neesemann A.3,O’Brien D. P.5,Kneissl T.3,Ermakov A. I.6,Fu R. R.6,Bland M. T.7,Nathues A.8,Platz T.8,Williams D. A.9,Jaumann R.310,Castillo-Rogez J. C.11,Ruesch O.12,Schmidt B.13,Park R. S.11,Preusker F.10,Buczkowski D. L.14,Russell C. T.15,Raymond C. A.11

Affiliation:

1. Institut für Planetologie, Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität, Münster, Germany.

2. Southwest Research Institute, Boulder, CO 80302, USA.

3. Institute of Geological Sciences, Freie Universität Berlin, Berlin, Germany.

4. Lunar and Planetary Institute, Houston, TX 77058, USA.

5. Planetary Science Institute, Tucson, AZ 85719, USA.

6. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.

7. U.S. Geological Survey, Astrogeology Science Center, Flagstaff, AZ 86001, USA.

8. Max-Planck Institute for Solar System Research, Göttingen, Germany.

9. Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85281, USA.

10. German Aerospace Center (DLR), Berlin, Germany.

11. Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA 91109, USA.

12. NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD 20771, USA.

13. Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA 30332, USA.

14. John Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory, Laurel, MD 20723, USA.

15. Department of Earth and Space Sciences, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION Thermochemical models have predicted that the dwarf planet Ceres has, to some extent, formed a mantle. Moreover, due to viscous relaxation, these models indicate that Ceres should have an icy crust with few or no impact craters. However, the Dawn spacecraft has shown that Ceres has elevation excursions of ~15 km, cliffs, graben, steep-sided mountains, and a heavily cratered surface. RATIONALE We used Dawn’s Framing Camera to study the morphology, size frequency, and spatial distribution of the craters on Ceres. These data allow us to infer the structure and evolution of Ceres’ outer shell. RESULTS A large variety of crater morphologies are present on Ceres, including bowl-shaped craters, polygonal craters, floor-fractured craters, terraces, central peaks, smooth floors, flowlike features, bright spots, secondary craters, and crater chains. The morphology of some impact craters is consistent with water ice in the subsurface. Although this might have favored relaxation, there are also large unrelaxed craters. The transition from bowl-shaped simple craters to modified complex craters occurs at diameters of about 7.5 to 12 km. Craters larger than 300 km are absent, but low-pass filtering of the digital elevation model suggests the existence of two quasi-circular depressions with diameters of ~570 km (125.56°E and 19.60°N) and ~830 km (24.76°W and 0.5°N). Craters are heterogeneously distributed across Ceres’ surface, with more craters in the northern versus the southern hemisphere. The lowest crater densities are associated with large, well-preserved southern hemisphere impact craters such as Urvara and Yalode. Because the low crater density (LCD) terrain extends across a large latitude range in some cases (e.g., Urvara and Yalode: ~18°N and 75°S; Kerwan: ~30°N and 46°S), its spatial distribution is inconsistent with simple relaxation driven by warmer equatorial temperatures. We instead propose that impact-driven resurfacing is the more likely LCD formation process, although we cannot completely rule out an internal (endogenic) origin. We applied two different methodologies to derive absolute model ages from observed crater size-frequency distributions. The lunar-derived model adapts the lunar production and chronology functions to impact conditions on Ceres, taking into account impact velocities, projectile densities, current collision probabilities, and surface gravity. The asteroid-derived model derives a production function by scaling the directly observed object size-frequency distribution from the main asteroid belt (extended to sizes <5 km by a collisional model) to the resulting size-frequency distribution of cerean craters, using similar cerean target parameters as the lunar-derived model. By dating a smooth region associated with the Kerwan crater, we determined absolute model ages of 550 million and 720 million years, depending on which chronology model is applied. CONCLUSION Crater morphology and the simple-to-complex crater transition indicate that Ceres’ outer shell is likely neither pure ice nor pure rock but an ice-rock mixture that allows for limited relaxation. The heterogeneous crater distribution across the surface indicates crustal heterogeneities and a complex geologic evolution of Ceres. There is evidence for at least some geologic activity occurring in Ceres’ recent history. Spatial density of craters larger than 20 km on Ceres. Crater rims are shown as black solid circles. Blue indicates areas with LCDs; yellow and red represent more highly cratered areas. The smallest dashed ellipse denotes the idealized former rim of an extremely degraded impact crater at 48.9°E and 44.9°S, which is barely recognizable in imagery but apparent from the global digital elevation model. Also shown as dashed circles are the outlines of two large putative basins. Unambiguously recognized basins >300 km in diameter are missing, and there are several areas with LCDs associated with large impact craters (e.g., Yalode, Urvara, Kerwan, Ezinu, Vinotonus, Dantu, and two unnamed craters northeast and southeast of Oxo). Areas A and B are topographic rises with central depressions that also show LCDs.

Funder

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

California Institute of Technology

NASA

German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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