113 research outputs found
The collisional evolution of undifferentiated asteroids and the formation of chondritic meteoroids
Most meteorites are fragments from recent collisions experienced in the
asteroid belt. In such a hyper-velocity collision, the smaller collision
partner is destroyed, whereas a crater on the asteroid is formed or it is
entirely disrupted, too. The present size distribution of the asteroid belt
suggests that an asteroid with 100 km radius is encountered times
during the lifetime of the Solar System by objects larger than 10 cm in radius;
the formed craters cover the surface of the asteroid about 100 times. We
present a Monte Carlo code that takes into account the statistical bombardment
of individual infinitesimally small surface elements, the subsequent compaction
of the underlying material, the formation of a crater and a regolith layer. For
the entire asteroid, 10,000 individual surface elements are calculated. We
compare the ejected material from the calculated craters with the shock stage
of meteorites with low petrologic type and find that these most likely stem
from smaller parent bodies that do not possess a significant regolith layer.
For larger objects, which accrete a regolith layer, a prediction of the
thickness depending on the largest visible crater can be made. Additionally, we
compare the crater distribution of an object initially 100 km in radius with
the shape model of the asteroid (21) Lutetia, assuming it to be initially
formed spherical with a radius that is equal to its longest present ellipsoid
length. Here, we find the shapes of both objects to show resemblance to each
other.Comment: Accepted by Ap
Accretion of water in carbonaceous chondrites: current evidence and implications for the delivery of water to early Earth
Protoplanetary disks are dust-rich structures around young stars. The
crystalline and amorphous materials contained within these disks are variably
thermally processed and accreted to make bodies of a wide range of sizes and
compositions, depending on the heliocentric distance of formation. The
chondritic meteorites are fragments of relatively small and undifferentiated
bodies, and the minerals that they contain carry chemical signatures providing
information about the early environment available for planetesimal formation. A
current hot topic of debate is the delivery of volatiles to terrestrial
planets, understanding that they were built from planetesimals formed under far
more reducing conditions than the primordial carbonaceous chondritic bodies. In
this review, we describe significant evidence for the accretion of ices and
hydrated minerals in the outer protoplanetary disk. In that distant region
highly porous and fragile carbon and water-rich transitional asteroids formed,
being the parent bodies of the carbonaceous chondrites (CCs). CCs are
undifferentiated meteorites that never melted but experienced other physical
processes including thermal and aqueous alteration. Recent evidence indicates
that few of them have escaped significant alteration, retaining unique features
that can be interpreted as evidence of wet accretion. Some examples of
carbonaceous chondrite parent body aqueous alteration will be presented.
Finally, atomistic interpretations of the first steps leading to water-mediated
alteration during the accretion of CCs are provided and discussed. From these
new insights into the water retained in CCs we can decipher the pathways of
delivery of volatiles to the terrestrial planets.Comment: 37 pages, 2 Tables, 10 Figures Presented in the International ESAC
workshop "Ices in the Solar System" To be published in Space Science Reviews
(SPAC-D-18-00036R3
Deep machine learning for meteor monitoring: advances with transfer learning and gradient-weighted class activation mapping
In recent decades, the use of optical detection systems for meteor studies
has increased dramatically, resulting in huge amounts of data being analyzed.
Automated meteor detection tools are essential for studying the continuous
meteoroid incoming flux, recovering fresh meteorites, and achieving a better
understanding of our Solar System. Concerning meteor detection, distinguishing
false positives between meteor and non-meteor images has traditionally been
performed by hand, which is significantly time-consuming. To address this
issue, we developed a fully automated pipeline that uses Convolutional Neural
Networks (CNNs) to classify candidate meteor detections. Our new method is able
to detect meteors even in images that contain static elements such as clouds,
the Moon, and buildings. To accurately locate the meteor within each frame, we
employ the Gradient-weighted Class Activation Mapping (Grad-CAM) technique.
This method facilitates the identification of the region of interest by
multiplying the activations from the last convolutional layer with the average
of the gradients across the feature map of that layer. By combining these
findings with the activation map derived from the first convolutional layer, we
effectively pinpoint the most probable pixel location of the meteor. We trained
and evaluated our model on a large dataset collected by the Spanish Meteor
Network (SPMN) and achieved a precision of 98\%. Our new methodology presented
here has the potential to reduce the workload of meteor scientists and station
operators and improve the accuracy of meteor tracking and classification.Comment: Accepted in Planetary and Space Scienc
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