论文标题
通过混合金属芯和表面外壳的混合
Giant Impact onto a Vesta-Like Asteroid and Formation of Mesosiderites through Mixing of Metallic Core and Surface Crust
论文作者
论文摘要
使用中替代物是一种由硅酸盐和Fe-ni金属混合物组成的石质铁陨石。中氧化物硅酸盐和金属被认为分别来自分化小行星的地壳和金属芯。相比之下,中层很少包含主要包含在地幔中的橄榄石。尽管对分化小行星的巨大影响被认为是混合地壳和金属材料以形成中层的一种可能的机制,但这种巨大的撞击如何形成中siderite石的材料,而不包括外壳材料。我们使用平滑的粒子流体动力学方法对分化小行星进行了巨大影响的数值模拟,以研究所得物体上混合材料的详细分布。对于目标主体的内部结构,我们使用了源自小行星Vesta的岩浆海洋结晶模型的薄壳模型,以及通过Dawn Probe从Vesta观察到的近距离观察到的厚壳和大核模型。在以前模型的模拟中,金属芯的发掘需要几乎灾难性的影响,而地幔则在大型表面积上暴露。因此,在其表面生产的石质铁材料可能包括地幔材料,并且很难生产中氧化矿石样材料。相反,在使用后一种模型的模拟中,即使冲击挖掘金属芯,也只能在冲击部位暴露地幔材料,并且可以形成少量地幔材料的表面,并且可以形成中氧化矿石样材料。因此,我们的模拟表明,具有厚皮和大核的内部结构更有可能是中s骨的母体,而不是从传统的岩浆海洋模型推断出的薄壳内部结构。
Mesosiderites are a type of stony-iron meteorites composed of a mixture of silicates and Fe-Ni metals. The mesosiderite silicates and metals are considered to have originated from the crust and metal core, respectively, of a differentiated asteroid. In contrast, mesosiderites rarely contain the olivine that is mainly included in a mantle. Although a giant impact onto a differentiated asteroid is considered to be a probable mechanism to mix crust and metal materials to form mesosiderites, it is not obvious how such a giant impact can form mesosiderite-like materials without including mantle materials. We conducted numerical simulations of giant impacts onto differentiated asteroids, using the smoothed particle hydrodynamics method, to investigate the detailed distribution of mixed materials on the resultant bodies. For the internal structure of a target body, we used a thin-crust model derived from the magma ocean crystallization model of the asteroid Vesta and a thick-crust and a large-core model suggested from the proximity observation of Vesta by the Dawn probe. In the simulations with the former model, excavation of the metal core requires nearly catastrophic impacts and mantle is exposed over large surface areas. Thus, stony-iron materials produced on its surface are likely to include mantle materials and it is difficult to produce mesosiderite-like materials. Conversely, in the simulations with the latter model, mantle materials are exposed only at impact sites, even when the impacts excavate the metal core, and the formation of a surface with little mantle material and the formation of mesosiderite-like materials are possible. Therefore, our simulations suggest that an internal structure with a thick crust and a large core is more likely as a mesosiderite parent body rather than the thin-crust internal structure inferred from the conventional magma ocean model.