Depth of maturity in the Moon's regolith
Abstract
The observed maturity of the lunar surface is a function of its exposure to the weathering agents of the space environment as well as the rates of regolith gardening and overturn. Regolith exposed on the surface weathers until it is buried below material delivered to the surface by impact events; weathering resumes when it is re-exposed to the surface environment by later impacts. This cycle repeats until a mature layer of some thickness develops. The gardening rate of the upper regolith has recently been shown to be substantially higher than previously thought, and new insights on the rates of space weathering and potential variation of these rates with solar wind flux have been gained from remote sensing as well as laboratory studies. Examining the depth to which the lunar regolith is mature across a variety of locations on the Moon can provide new insight into both gardening and space weathering. Here we use images from the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera (LROC) with pixel scales less than approximately 50 cm to examine the morphology and reflectance of impact craters in the 2- to 100-m diameter size range. Apollo core samples show substantial variation, but suggest that the upper 50 cm to >1 m of regolith is mature at the sampled sites. These depths indicate that because craters excavate to a maximum depth of 10% of the transient crater diameter, craters with diameters less than 5-10 m will typically expose only mature material and this phenomenon should be observable in LROC images. Thus, we present the results of classifying craters by both morphology and reflectance to determine the size-frequency distribution of craters that expose immature material versus those that do not. These results are then compared to observations of reflectance values for the ejecta of craters that have formed during the LRO mission. These newly formed craters span a similar range of diameters, and there is no ambiguity about post-impact weathering because they are less than a decade old.
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2017
- Bibcode:
- 2017AGUFM.P41D2852D
- Keywords:
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- 6250 Moon;
- PLANETARY SCIENCES: SOLAR SYSTEM OBJECTS;
- 5420 Impact phenomena;
- cratering;
- PLANETARY SCIENCES: SOLID SURFACE PLANETS;
- 5464 Remote sensing;
- PLANETARY SCIENCES: SOLID SURFACE PLANETS