Evolution of pits at the surface of 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko
Selma Benseguane, Aur\'elie Guilbert-Lepoutre, J\'er\'emie Lasue,, S\'ebastien Besse, C\'edric Leyrat, Arnaud Beth, Marc Costa Sitj\`a, Bj\"orn, Grieger, and Maria Teresa Capria

TL;DR
This study investigates the formation and evolution of surface pits on comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, concluding that erosion from cometary activity is insufficient to create these features, which are likely primordial or least altered.
Contribution
The paper provides a quantitative analysis of surface erosion on 67P, demonstrating that erosion cannot account for pit formation and identifying the least processed features as potential original structures.
Findings
Maximum erosion after ten orbits is about 80 meters.
Progressive erosion cannot explain the formation of observed pits.
Deep circular pits are likely the least altered features.
Abstract
The observation of pits at the surface of comets offers the opportunity to take a glimpse into the properties and the mechanisms that shape a nucleus through cometary activity. If the origin of these pits is still a matter of debate, multiple studies have recently suggested that known phase transitions alone could not have carved these morphological features on the surface of 67P/C-G. We want to understand how the progressive modification of 67P's surface due to cometary activity might have affected the characteristics of pits. In particular, we aim to understand whether signatures of the formation mechanism of these morphological features can still be identified. To quantify the amount of erosion sustained at the surface of 67P since it arrived on its currently observed orbit, we selected 380 facets of a medium-resolution shape model of the nucleus, sampling 30 pits across the surface.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Astronomical and nuclear sciences · Isotope Analysis in Ecology
