Origin and evolution of Mercury's circumsolar dust ring
Petr Pokorny, Ariel N. Deutsch, Marc J. Kuchner

TL;DR
This study investigates the origin of Mercury's circumsolar dust ring, finding that recent impacts on Mercury likely contribute to its formation, with the co-orbital resonance scenario being the most consistent with observations.
Contribution
The paper evaluates multiple origin scenarios for Mercury's dust ring and identifies recent impacts as a plausible source, providing new insights into its formation mechanisms.
Findings
Only the co-orbital resonance scenario reproduces the observed ring.
Two recent craters on Mercury are younger than 50 Ma.
Impact debris is insufficient alone; multiple impacts likely contributed.
Abstract
A circumsolar dust ring has been recently discovered close to the orbit of Mercury. There are currently no hypotheses for the origin of this ring in the literature, so we explore four different origin scenarios here: the dust originated from (1) the sporadic meteoroid complex that comprises the major portion of the Zodiacal Cloud, (2) recent asteroidal/cometary activity, (3) hypothetical dust-generating bodies locked in mean-motion resonances beyond Mercury, and (4) bodies co-orbiting with Mercury. We find that only scenario (4) reproduces the observed structure and location of Mercury's dust ring. However, the lifetimes of Mercury's co-orbitals (<20 Ma) preclude the primordial origin of the co-orbiting source population due to dynamical instability and meteoroid bombardment, demanding a recent event feeding the observed dust ring. We find that an impact on Mercury can eject debris…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Planetary Science and Exploration · Geology and Paleoclimatology Research
