Tidal Evolution of Rubble Piles
Peter Goldreich, Re'em Sari

TL;DR
This paper models the structure and tidal evolution of rubble pile asteroids, showing they are less rigid than monoliths, which accelerates their orbital changes and explains observed asteroid properties.
Contribution
It introduces a new model for the rigidity of rubble pile bodies, linking it to their composition and yield strain, and applies this to explain asteroid tidal evolution.
Findings
Rubble piles have significantly lower effective rigidity than monoliths.
Tidal evolution of rubble pile asteroids is 1000 to 10,000 times faster than monoliths.
The model aligns with laboratory experiments on sand.
Abstract
Many small bodies in the solar system are believed to be rubble piles, a collection of smaller elements separated by voids. We propose a model for the structure of a self-gravitating rubble pile. Static friction prevents its elements from sliding relative to each other. Stresses are concentrated around points of contact between individual elements. The effective dimensionless rigidity, , is related to that of a monolithic body of similar composition and size, by , where is the yield strain. This represents a reduction in effective rigidity below the maximum radius, , at which a rubble pile can exist. Densities derived for binary near-Earth asteroids imply that they are rubble piles. As a consequence, their tidal…
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