Microporosity and parent body of the rubble-pile NEA (162173) Ryugu
Wladimir Neumann, Matthias Grott, Mario Trieloff, Ralf Jaumann, Jens, Biele, Maximilian Hamm, Ekkehard K\"uhrt

TL;DR
This study investigates the high microporosity of asteroid Ryugu by modeling parent body evolution, suggesting it originated from a small, early-formed planetesimal, contrasting with larger bodies of water-rich meteorites.
Contribution
It provides a novel modeling approach to constrain the size and formation time of Ryugu's parent body based on microporosity and surface boulder data.
Findings
Ryugu's parent body likely a few km in size
Accreted within 2-3 million years after CAIs
Produced both low- and high-density boulders
Abstract
Observations of C-type NEAs and lab investigations of carbonaceous chondritic (CC) meteorites provide strong evidence for a high porosity of C-type asteroids. Boulder microporosity values derived from in-situ measurements at the surface of the rubble-pile NEA Ryugu of up to 55% are substantially higher than for water-rich CC samples and could indicate distinct evolution paths for the parent body of Ryugu and parent bodies of carbonaceous chondrites, despite spectral similarities. In the present study, we calculate the evolution of the temperature and porosity for early solar system's planetesimals in order to constrain the range of parameters that result in microporosities compatible with Ryugu's high-porosity material and likely burial depths for the boulders observed at the surface. By varying key properties of the parent body, such as accretion time t0 and radius R that have strong…
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