Long-term Trends of Regolith Movement on the Surface of Small Bodies
Chenyang Huang, Yang Yu, Bin Cheng, Qingyun Wang

TL;DR
This study models the long-term movement of surface regolith on small bodies like asteroids, revealing how spin rate changes influence global regolith migration patterns and surface evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a nonlinear dynamical model for secular regolith movement that accounts for complex topography and gravitational fields, providing new insights into surface evolution during spin-up.
Findings
Regolith migrates toward mid-latitudes at low spin rates.
High spin rates cause regolith to move toward the equator.
Equilibrium points significantly influence long-term regolith trends.
Abstract
This paper studies the long-term migration of disturbed regolith materials on the surface of Solar System small bodies from the viewpoint of nonlinear dynamics. We propose an approximation model for secular mass movement, which combines the complex topography and irregular gravitational field. Choosing asteroid 101955 Bennu as a representative, the global change of the dynamical environment is examined, which presents a division of the creeping-sliding-shedding regions for a spun-up asteroid. In the creeping region, the dynamical equation of disturbed regolith grains is established based on the assumption of "trigger-slide" motion mode. The equilibrium points, local manifolds and large-scale trajectories of the system are calculated to clarify the dynamical characteristics of long-term regolith movement. Generally, we find for a low spin rate, the surface regolith grains flow toward the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Geology and Paleoclimatology Research · Planetary Science and Exploration
