A re-assessment of the Kuiper belt size distribution for sub-kilometer objects, revealing collisional equilibrium at small sizes
A. Morbidelli, D. Nesvorny, W.F. Bottke, S. Marchi

TL;DR
This study combines crater records and a Kuiper belt model to analyze the size distribution of small Kuiper belt objects, revealing they are in collisional equilibrium down to tens of meters.
Contribution
It provides a new assessment of the Kuiper belt size distribution, especially for sub-kilometer objects, using crater data and impact modeling.
Findings
KBO size distribution follows a power law with slope -1.2 to -1.0.
KBOs are in collisional equilibrium from ~2 km down to tens of meters.
The size distribution steepens below 10-30 meters, consistent with dust measurements.
Abstract
We combine several constraints provided by the crater records on Arrokoth and the worlds of the Pluto system to compute the size-frequency distribution (SFD) of the crater production function for craters with diameter D<10km. For this purpose, we use a Kuiper belt objects (KBO) population model calibrated on telescopic surveys, that describes also the evolution of the KBO population during the early Solar System. We further calibrate this model using the crater record on Pluto, Charon and Nix. Using this model, we compute the impact probability on Arrokoth, integrated over the age of the Solar System. This probability is then used together with other observational constraints to determine the slope of the crater-production function on Arrokoth. In addition, we use our Kuiper belt model also to compare the impact rates and velocities of KBOs on Arrokoth with those on Charon, integrated…
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