The Cratering History of Asteroid (21) Lutetia
S. Marchi (1), M. Massironi (2), J.-B. Vincent (3), A. Morbidelli (1),, S. Mottola (4), F. Marzari (2), M. Kueppers (5), S. Besse (6), N. Thomas (7),, C. Barbieri (2), G. Naletto (2), H. Sierks (3) ((1) OCA, (2) University of, Padova, (3) MPS, (4) DLR, (5) ESAC, (6) LAM

TL;DR
This study analyzes the cratering history of asteroid Lutetia using spacecraft images and impact models to estimate surface ages and understand its collisional evolution.
Contribution
It applies impact rate models and crater scaling laws to interpret Lutetia's crater distribution and derive regional surface ages, revealing complex collisional history.
Findings
Lutetia's surface shows evidence of recent resurfacing events.
Different regions on Lutetia have ages ranging from tens of Myr to over 3.6 Gyr.
The asteroid experienced a complex collisional evolution with major resurfacing.
Abstract
The European Space Agency's Rosetta spacecraft passed by the main belt asteroid (21) Lutetia the 10th July 2010. With its ~100km size, Lutetia is one of the largest asteroids ever imaged by a spacecraft. During the flyby, the on-board OSIRIS imaging system acquired spectacular images of Lutetia's northern hemisphere revealing a complex surface scarred by numerous impact craters, reaching the maximum dimension of about 55km. In this paper, we assess the cratering history of the asteroid. For this purpose, we apply current models describing the formation and evolution of main belt asteroids, that provide the rate and velocity distributions of impactors. These models, coupled with appropriate crater scaling laws, allow us to interpret the observed crater size-frequency distribution (SFD) and constrain the cratering history. Thanks to this approach, we derive the crater retention age of…
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