TY - JOUR
T1 - Space environment of an asteroid preserved on micrograins returned by the Hayabusa spacecraft
AU - Nakamura, Eizo
AU - Makishima, Akio
AU - Moriguti, Takuya
AU - Kobayashi, Katsura
AU - Tanaka, Ryoji
AU - Kunihiro, Tak
AU - Tsujimori, Tatsuki
AU - Sakaguchi, Chie
AU - Kitagawa, Hiroshi
AU - Ota, Tsutomu
AU - Yachi, Yusuke
AU - Yada, Toru
AU - Abe, Masanao
AU - Fujimura, Akio
AU - Ueno, Munetaka
AU - Mukai, Toshifumi
AU - Yoshikawa, Makoto
AU - Kawaguchi, Jun'ichiro
PY - 2012/3/13
Y1 - 2012/3/13
N2 - Records of micrometeorite collisions at down to submicron scales were discovered on dust grains recovered from near-Earth asteroid 25143 (Itokawa). Because the grains were sampled from very near the surface of the asteroid, by the Hayabusa spacecraft, their surfaces reflect the low-gravity space environment influencing the physical nature of the asteroid exterior. The space environment was examined by description of grain surfaces and asteroidal scenes were reconstructed. Chemical and O isotope compositions of five lithic grains, with diameters near 50 μm, indicate that the uppermost layer of the rubble-pile-textured Itokawa is largely composed of equilibrated LL-ordinary-chondrite-like material with superimposed effects of collisions. The surfaces of the grains are dominated by fractures, and the fracture planes contain not only sub-μm-sized craters but also a large number of sub-μm- to several- μm-sized adhered particles, some of the latter composed of glass. The size distribution and chemical compositions of the adhered particles, together with the occurrences of the sub-μm-sized craters, suggest formation by hypervelocity collisions of micrometeorites at down to nm scales, a process expected in the physically hostile environment at an asteroid's surface. We describe impact-related phenomena, ranging in scale from 10 -9 to 10 4 meters, demonstrating the central role played by impact processes in the long-term evolution of planetary bodies. Impact appears to be an important process shaping the exteriors of not only large planetary bodies, such as the moon, but also low-gravity bodies such as asteroids.
AB - Records of micrometeorite collisions at down to submicron scales were discovered on dust grains recovered from near-Earth asteroid 25143 (Itokawa). Because the grains were sampled from very near the surface of the asteroid, by the Hayabusa spacecraft, their surfaces reflect the low-gravity space environment influencing the physical nature of the asteroid exterior. The space environment was examined by description of grain surfaces and asteroidal scenes were reconstructed. Chemical and O isotope compositions of five lithic grains, with diameters near 50 μm, indicate that the uppermost layer of the rubble-pile-textured Itokawa is largely composed of equilibrated LL-ordinary-chondrite-like material with superimposed effects of collisions. The surfaces of the grains are dominated by fractures, and the fracture planes contain not only sub-μm-sized craters but also a large number of sub-μm- to several- μm-sized adhered particles, some of the latter composed of glass. The size distribution and chemical compositions of the adhered particles, together with the occurrences of the sub-μm-sized craters, suggest formation by hypervelocity collisions of micrometeorites at down to nm scales, a process expected in the physically hostile environment at an asteroid's surface. We describe impact-related phenomena, ranging in scale from 10 -9 to 10 4 meters, demonstrating the central role played by impact processes in the long-term evolution of planetary bodies. Impact appears to be an important process shaping the exteriors of not only large planetary bodies, such as the moon, but also low-gravity bodies such as asteroids.
KW - Comprehensive analysis
KW - Impacts
KW - Interplanetary dust
KW - Sample-return mission
KW - Space weathering
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84858166544&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1073/pnas.1116236109
DO - 10.1073/pnas.1116236109
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84858166544
SN - 0027-8424
VL - 109
SP - E624-E629
JO - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
IS - 11
ER -