Structural analysis of rubble-pile asteroids applied to collisional evolution
Yang Yu, Derek C. Richardson, Patrick Michel

TL;DR
This study investigates how rubble-pile asteroids respond to impacts, revealing that they tend to stabilize and crystallize under certain conditions, with implications for their structural evolution and resilience.
Contribution
The paper introduces a combined analytical and numerical approach to assess the stability and evolution of rubble-pile asteroids under impacts, highlighting the role of impact magnitude and rotation.
Findings
Clusters tend towards crystallization under intermittent impacts.
High stability configurations are more likely to survive impacts.
Rotation enhances the response of loose-packed clusters.
Abstract
Solar system small bodies come in a wide variety of shapes and sizes, which are achieved following very individual evolutional paths through billions of years. This paper focuses on the reshaping process of rubble-pile asteroids driven by meteorite impacts. In our study, numerous possible equilibrium configurations are obtained via Monte Carlo simulation, and the structural stability of these configurations is determined via eigen analysis of the geometric constructions. The eigen decomposition reveals a connection between the cluster's reactions and the types of external disturbance. Numerical simulations are performed to verify the analytical results. The gravitational N-body code pkdgrav is used to mimic the responses of the cluster under intermittent non-dispersive impacts. We statistically confirm that the stability index, the total gravitational potential and the volume of inertia…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Planetary Science and Exploration · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
