Excavating Stickney crater at Phobos
Abstract
Stickney crater, at 9 km across, dominates the morphology of 22 km Phobos, the larger of the two moons of Mars. The Stickney impact event had global repercussions for Phobos, including extensive resurfacing and fracturing of the moon. Understanding the initial conditions and dynamical consequences of the collision is necessary to test competing hypotheses for the origin of peculiar grooved terrain that striates much of the surface. Previous modeling of the impact event was unable to replicate Stickney without globally fragmenting the satellite. Here we describe high-resolution numerical simulations that successfully generate Stickney crater while maintaining the large-scale structure of Phobos. Target porosity, which is estimated to be significant, aids in keeping the moon intact. Damage follows patterns centered on Stickney that are inconsistent with the observed alignment of grooved terrain on Phobos. Low-velocity boulders are ejected at shallow angles in sufficient numbers to support a rolling-boulder origin for grooved terrain.
- Publication:
-
Geophysical Research Letters
- Pub Date:
- October 2016
- DOI:
- 10.1002/2016GL070749
- Bibcode:
- 2016GeoRL..4310595B
- Keywords:
-
- Phobos;
- small bodies;
- numerical modeling;
- impact cratering;
- Stickney