Investigation of boulder distribution in (1) Ceres and insight into its surface evolution
Mitsuha Noma, Naoyuki Hirata

TL;DR
This study analyzes boulder distribution on Ceres using high-resolution images, revealing impact cratering as the main formation process, with size limits influenced by mechanical strength and a boulder lifetime under 100 million years.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of boulder size distribution and formation mechanisms on Ceres using high-resolution Dawn mission data.
Findings
Boulders are mainly formed by impact cratering.
Maximum boulder size is approximately 200 meters.
Boulder lifetime is estimated to be under 100 million years.
Abstract
The surface conditions of terrestrial bodies strongly reflect their geological evolutionary processes and vary among various terrestrial bodies. This diversity is attributed to variations in the timescales of boulder formation through processes such as impact cratering, rockfalls from crater walls, seismic motion, and boulder fragmentation caused by micrometeoroid impacts and thermal stress. In this study, we examined boulders on Ceres using high-resolution images with a resolution of approximately 5 m/px obtained during the Ceres Extended Mission 2 Orbit 7 of the Dawn mission. Almost all boulders were present around impact craters, even at a resolution of 5 m/px, thus indicating that the boulders on Ceres were created by impact cratering alone. The maximum boulder size on Ceres is approximately 200 m, even around large craters, which may indicate the upper size limit determined by the…
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