Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8133871 | Icarus | 2018 | 46 Pages |
Abstract
We performed the first global surface roughness assessment of the asteroid 433 Eros at baselines (horizontal distances) of 4-200â¯m. We measured surface roughness using the root-mean-square (RMS) deviation over a variety of baselines after first detrending the height to remove long-wavelength slope effects. The global surface roughness of Eros is found to be self-affine at all baselines investigated. The surface roughness is statistically correlated with crater density at baselines of 100-200â¯m and boulders at a baseline of 5â¯m. No global spatial statistical correlation was found for baselines of 4-200 and mapped tectonic lineaments, ponds, slope, or geopotential elevation. The surface roughness of the crater Shoemaker (Charlois Regio) is controlled by the interplay of a high boulder density producing higher surface roughness values at small baselines and low crater density lowering surface roughness values at long baselines. We estimated the mobile regolith thickness (regolith that moves around and infills topography) to be 0.2-6.2â¯m from the difference in the surface roughness values at the baseline of 4â¯m. Furthermore, we find that the change in RMS deviation as a function of baseline compares favorably with the moon, and differs significantly from existing results for rubble-pile asteroid Itokawa.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Space and Planetary Science
Authors
Hannah C.M. Susorney, Olivier S. Barnouin,