TY - JOUR
T1 - The case of the missing ceres family
AU - Rivkin, Andrew S.
AU - Asphaug, Erik
AU - Bottke, William F.
N1 - Funding Information:
This paper had its origins in a discussion at the First International Primitive Body Exploration Working Group in Okinawa in 2008, and we thank Uwe Keller for inadvertently starting us down this path. Thanks to Lindy Elkins-Tanton, David Nesvorný, Francesca DeMeo, and Simone Marchi for putting up with ASR’s badgering about the topic and for asking hard questions about the idea. Thanks to Carolyn Ernst, Matthew Knight, Valerio Carruba, Jennifer Grier, Julie Castillo-Rogez, and Patrick Peplowski for helpful conversations, sharing data, and in some cases doing some calculations. Thanks to Miroslav Brož and an anonymous reviewer for helping strengthen this manuscript and for very useful comments. The spur to write this up was “Academic Document Writing Month”, thanks to the tweeps on Twitter for their support and kind words. EIA is supported by NASA Planetary Geology and Geophysics Program. ASR was supported in this work by the NSF and NASA Planetary Astronomy Programs.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2014 Elsevier Inc.
PY - 2014/11/5
Y1 - 2014/11/5
N2 - Ceres is unusual among large (>250. km) asteroids in lacking a dynamical family. We explore possible explanations, noting that its particularly large size and the ubiquity of families associated with other large asteroids makes avoidance of a sufficiently-sized collision by chance exceedingly unlikely. Current models of Ceres' thermal history and interior structure favor a differentiated object with an icy near-surface covered by an ~0.1-1. km lag deposit, which could result in a collisional family of diverse, predominately icy bodies. We predict that sublimation of an icy Ceres family would occur on timescales of hundreds of millions of years, much shorter than the history of the Solar System. Sublimation on a Ceres family body would be aided by a low non-ice fraction and a high average temperature, both of which would inhibit lag deposit development. Because there seems to be no likely mechanism for removing a rocky Ceres family, and because the formation of a Ceres family of some kind seems nearly statistically inevitable, the lack of a Ceres family is indirect but independent evidence for Ceres' differentiation.All of the other large asteroids lacking dynamical families (704 Interamnia, 52 Europa, and 65 Cybele) have spectral properties similar to Ceres, or otherwise suggesting ice at their surfaces. While other large asteroids with similar spectral properties do have families (24 Themis, 10 Hygiea, 31 Euphrosyne), their families are not well understood, particularly Hygiea.
AB - Ceres is unusual among large (>250. km) asteroids in lacking a dynamical family. We explore possible explanations, noting that its particularly large size and the ubiquity of families associated with other large asteroids makes avoidance of a sufficiently-sized collision by chance exceedingly unlikely. Current models of Ceres' thermal history and interior structure favor a differentiated object with an icy near-surface covered by an ~0.1-1. km lag deposit, which could result in a collisional family of diverse, predominately icy bodies. We predict that sublimation of an icy Ceres family would occur on timescales of hundreds of millions of years, much shorter than the history of the Solar System. Sublimation on a Ceres family body would be aided by a low non-ice fraction and a high average temperature, both of which would inhibit lag deposit development. Because there seems to be no likely mechanism for removing a rocky Ceres family, and because the formation of a Ceres family of some kind seems nearly statistically inevitable, the lack of a Ceres family is indirect but independent evidence for Ceres' differentiation.All of the other large asteroids lacking dynamical families (704 Interamnia, 52 Europa, and 65 Cybele) have spectral properties similar to Ceres, or otherwise suggesting ice at their surfaces. While other large asteroids with similar spectral properties do have families (24 Themis, 10 Hygiea, 31 Euphrosyne), their families are not well understood, particularly Hygiea.
KW - Asteroid ceres
KW - Asteroids
KW - Asteroids, composition
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U2 - 10.1016/j.icarus.2014.08.007
DO - 10.1016/j.icarus.2014.08.007
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84908052176
SN - 0019-1035
VL - 243
SP - 429
EP - 439
JO - Icarus
JF - Icarus
ER -