Gravitational slopes, geomorphology, and material strengths of the nucleus of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko from OSIRIS observations
O. Groussin, L. Jorda, A.-T. Auger, E. K\"uhrt, R. Gaskell, C., Capanna, F. Scholten, F. Preusker, P. Lamy, S. Hviid, J. Knollenberg, U., Keller, C. Huettig, H. Sierks, C. Barbieri, R. Rodrigo, D. Koschny, H., Rickman, M. F. A Hearn, J. Agarwal, M. A. Barucci, J.-L. Bertaux

TL;DR
This study links surface morphology and gravitational slopes on comet 67P's nucleus to constrain material strengths, revealing low-strength materials and insights into comet formation processes.
Contribution
It provides new estimates of mechanical strengths of comet 67P's surface materials using OSIRIS data and surface morphology analysis.
Findings
Low-slope terrains have fine materials and large isolated boulders.
Intermediate slopes feature debris fields with intermediate-sized boulders.
High slopes are cliffs exposing consolidated material with no boulders.
Abstract
We study the link between gravitational slopes and the surface morphology on the nucleus of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko and provide constraints on the mechanical properties of the cometary material. We computed the gravitational slopes for five regions on the nucleus that are representative of the different morphologies observed on the surface, using two shape models computed from OSIRIS images by the stereo-photoclinometry (SPC) and stereo-photogrammetry (SPG) techniques. We estimated the tensile, shear, and compressive strengths using different surface morphologies and mechanical considerations. The different regions show a similar general pattern in terms of the relation between gravitational slopes and terrain morphology: i) low-slope terrains (0-20 deg) are covered by a fine material and contain a few large (10 m) and isolated boulders, ii) intermediate-slope terrains (20-45…
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