小行星的破坏性部分捕获是火星卫星的起源

IF 2.5 2区 物理与天体物理 Q2 ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS Icarus Pub Date : 2024-10-01 DOI:10.1016/j.icarus.2024.116337
Jacob A. Kegerreis , Jack J. Lissauer , Vincent R. Eke , Thomas D. Sandnes , Richard C. Elphic
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引用次数: 0

摘要

火星的小卫星--火卫一和火卫二--的起源仍然不明。人们通常认为它们要么是被捕获的小行星,要么是从巨大撞击产生的碎片盘中吸积而来。在这里,我们提出了另一种设想,即一颗被潮汐破坏的小行星的碎片被俘获并演变成一个碰撞原生卫星盘。我们模拟了初始破坏和碎片随后的轨道演化。我们发现,在太阳-火星框架内的广泛周距、速度、质量、自旋和方位范围内,未束缚小行星质量的百分之几十可以被捕获,并在碰撞时间尺度之外存活下来。此外,超过百分之一的小行星质量可以在卫星的吸积区域演变成环形。这意味着对母体质量的要求低于对巨型撞击的要求,这可能会增加通过这种途径形成原生卫星盘的可能性,与直接捕获不同,这种途径也可以自然地解释卫星的轨道。这三种形成方案分别意味着火星卫星的不同特性,有待即将进行的航天器任务来检验。
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Origin of Mars’s moons by disruptive partial capture of an asteroid
The origin of Mars’s small moons, Phobos and Deimos, remains unknown. They are typically thought either to be captured asteroids or to have accreted from a debris disk produced by a giant impact. Here, we present an alternative scenario wherein fragments of a tidally disrupted asteroid are captured and evolve into a collisional proto-satellite disk. We simulate the initial disruption and the fragments’ subsequent orbital evolution. We find that tens of percent of an unbound asteroid’s mass can be captured and survive beyond collisional timescales, across a broad range of periapsis distances, speeds, masses, spins, and orientations in the Sun–Mars frame. Furthermore, more than one percent of the asteroid’s mass could evolve to circularise in the moons’ accretion region. This implies a lower mass requirement for the parent body than that for a giant impact, which could increase the likelihood of this route to forming a proto-satellite disk that, unlike direct capture, could also naturally explain the moons’ orbits. These three formation scenarios each imply different properties of Mars’s moons to be tested by upcoming spacecraft missions.
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来源期刊
Icarus
Icarus 地学天文-天文与天体物理
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
18.80%
发文量
356
审稿时长
2-4 weeks
期刊介绍: Icarus is devoted to the publication of original contributions in the field of Solar System studies. Manuscripts reporting the results of new research - observational, experimental, or theoretical - concerning the astronomy, geology, meteorology, physics, chemistry, biology, and other scientific aspects of our Solar System or extrasolar systems are welcome. The journal generally does not publish papers devoted exclusively to the Sun, the Earth, celestial mechanics, meteoritics, or astrophysics. Icarus does not publish papers that provide "improved" versions of Bode''s law, or other numerical relations, without a sound physical basis. Icarus does not publish meeting announcements or general notices. Reviews, historical papers, and manuscripts describing spacecraft instrumentation may be considered, but only with prior approval of the editor. An entire issue of the journal is occasionally devoted to a single subject, usually arising from a conference on the same topic. The language of publication is English. American or British usage is accepted, but not a mixture of these.
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