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Fragment properties at the catastrophic disruption threshold: The effect of the parent body’s internal structure
Authors:Martin Jutzi  Patrick Michel  Derek C Richardson
Institution:a Physikalisches Institut, University of Bern, Sidlerstrasse 5, CH-3012 Bern, Switzerland
b University of Nice-Sophia Antipolis, UMR 6202 Cassiopée/CNRS, Observatoire de la Côte d’Azur, B.P. 4229, 06304 Nice cedex 4, France
c Department of Astronomy, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742-2421, USA
Abstract:Numerical simulations of asteroid breakups, including both the fragmentation of the parent body and the gravitational interactions between the fragments, have allowed us to reproduce successfully the main properties of asteroid families formed in different regimes of impact energy, starting from a non-porous parent body. In this paper, using the same approach, we concentrate on a single regime of impact energy, the so-called catastrophic threshold usually designated by View the MathML source, which results in the escape of half of the target’s mass. Thanks to our recent implementation of a model of fragmentation of porous materials, we can characterize View the MathML source for both porous and non-porous targets with a wide range of diameters. We can then analyze the potential influence of porosity on the value of View the MathML source, and by computing the gravitational phase of the collision in the gravity regime, we can characterize the collisional outcome in terms of the fragment size and ejection speed distributions, which are the main outcome properties used by collisional models to study the evolutions of the different populations of small bodies. We also check the dependency of View the MathML source on the impact speed of the projectile.In the strength regime, which corresponds to target sizes below a few hundreds of meters, we find that porous targets are more difficult to disrupt than non-porous ones. In the gravity regime, the outcome is controlled purely by gravity and porosity in the case of porous targets. In the case of non-porous targets, the outcome also depends on strength. Indeed, decreasing the strength of non-porous targets make them easier to disrupt in this regime, while increasing the strength of porous targets has much less influence on the value of View the MathML source. Therefore, one cannot say that non-porous targets are systematically easier or more difficult to disrupt than porous ones, as the outcome highly depends on the assumed strength values. In the gravity regime, we also confirm that the process of gravitational reaccumulation is at the origin of the largest remnant’s mass in both cases. We then propose some power-law relationships between View the MathML source and both target’s size and impact speed that can be used in collisional evolution models. The resulting fragment size distributions can also be reasonably fitted by a power-law whose exponent ranges between −2.2 and −2.7 for all target diameters in both cases and independently on the impact velocity (at least in the small range investigated between 3 and 5 km/s). Then, although ejection velocities in the gravity regime tend to be higher from porous targets, they remain on the same order as the ones from non-porous targets.
Keywords:Asteroids  Collisional physics  Asteroids  Composition
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