Ceres is covered in countless small, young craters, but none are
larger than 175 miles (280 kilometers) in diameter. To scientists, this
is a huge mystery, given that the dwarf planet must have been hit by
numerous large asteroids during its 4.5 billion-year lifetime. Where did
all the large craters go?
A new study in the journal Nature Communications explores this puzzle
of Ceres' missing large craters, using data from NASA's Dawn
spacecraft, which has been orbiting Ceres since March 2015.
"We concluded that a significant population of large craters on Ceres
has been obliterated beyond recognition over geological time scales,
which is likely the result of Ceres' peculiar composition and internal
evolution," said lead investigator Simone Marchi, a senior research
scientist at the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado.
Marchi and colleagues modeled collisions of other bodies with Ceres
since the dwarf planet formed, and predicted the number of large craters
that should have been present on its surface. These models predicted
Ceres should have up to 10 to 15 craters larger than 250 miles (400
kilometers) in diameter, and at least 40 craters larger than 60 miles
(100 kilometers) wide. However, Dawn has shown that Ceres has only 16
craters larger than 60 miles, and none larger than 175 miles (280
kilometers) across.
One idea about Ceres' origins holds that it formed farther out in the
solar system, perhaps in the vicinity of Neptune, but migrated in to
its present location. However, scientists determined that even if Ceres
migrated into the main asteroid belt relatively late in solar system
history, it should still have a significant number of large craters.
"Whatever the process or processes were, this obliteration of large
craters must have occurred over several hundred millions of years,"
Marchi said.
Dawn's images of Ceres reveal that the dwarf planet has at least
three large-scale depressions called "planitiae" that are up to 500
miles (800 kilometers) wide. These planitiae have craters in them that
formed in more recent times, but the larger depressions could be left
over from bigger impacts. One of them, called Vendimia Planitia, is a
sprawling area just north of Kerwan crater, Ceres' largest well-defined
impact basin. Vendimia Planitia must have formed much earlier than
Kerwan.
One reason for the lack of large craters could be related the interior structure of Ceres. There is evidence from Dawn
that the upper layers of Ceres contain ice. Because ice is less dense
than rock, the topography could "relax," or smooth out, more quickly if
ice or another lower-density material, such as salt, dominates the
subsurface composition. Recent analysis
of the center of Ceres' Occator Crater suggests that the salts found
there could be remnants of a frozen ocean under the surface, and that
liquid water could have been present in Ceres' interior.
Past hydrothermal activity, which may have influenced the salts
rising to the surface at Occator, could also have something to do with
the erasure of craters. If Ceres had widespread cryovolcanic activity in
the past -- the eruption of volatiles such as water -- these cryogenic
materials also could have flowed across the surface, possibly burying
pre-existing large craters. Smaller impacts would have then created new
craters on the resurfaced area.
"Somehow Ceres has healed its largest impact scars and renewed old, cratered surfaces," Marchi said.
Ceres differs from Dawn's previous destination, protoplanet Vesta, in
terms of cratering. Although Vesta is only half the size of Ceres, it
has a well-preserved 300-mile- (500-kilometer) -wide crater called
Rheasilvia, where an impacting asteroid knocked out a huge chunk of the
body. This and other large craters suggest that Vesta has not had
processes at work to smooth its surface, perhaps because it is thought
to have much less ice. Dawn visited Vesta for 14 months from 2011 to
2012.
"The ability to compare these two very different worlds in the
asteroid belt -- Vesta and Ceres -- is one of the great strengths of the
Dawn mission," Marchi said.
Dawn's mission is managed by JPL for NASA's Science Mission
Directorate in Washington. Dawn is a project of the directorate's
Discovery Program, managed by NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in
Huntsville, Alabama. UCLA is responsible for overall Dawn mission
science. Orbital ATK Inc., in Dulles, Virginia, designed and built the
spacecraft. The German Aerospace Center, Max Planck Institute for Solar
System Research, Italian Space Agency and Italian National Astrophysical
Institute are international partners on the mission team. For a
complete list of mission participants, visit:
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