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Published May 1995 | public
Journal Article

Hypervelocity Impacts and Magnetization of Small Bodies in the Solar System

Abstract

The observed magnetism of asteroids such as Gaspra and Ida (and other small bodies in the solar system including the Moon and meteorites) may have resulted from an impact-induced shock wave producing a thermodynamic state in which iron-nickel alloy, dispersed in a silicate matrix, is driven from the usual low-temperature, low-pressure, α, kaemacite, phase to the paramagnetic, epsilon (hcp), phase. The magnetization was acquired upon rarefaction and reentry into the ferromagnetic, α, structure. The degree of remagnetization depends on the strength of the ambient field, which may have been associated with a Solar-System-wide magnetic field. A transient held induced by the impact event itself may have resulted in a significant, or possibly, even a dominant contribution, as well. The scaling law of Housen et al. (Housen, K. R., R. M. Schmidt, and K. A. Holsapple 1991. Icarus 94, 180-190) for catastrophic asteroid impact disaggregation imposes a constraint on the degree to which small planetary bodies may be magnetized and yet survive fragmentation by the same event. Our modeling results show it is possible that Ida was magnetized when a large impact fractured a 125 +/- 22-km-radius protoasteroid to form the Koronis family. Similarly, we calculate that Gaspra could be a magnetized fragment of a 45 +/- 15 km-radius protoasteroid.

Additional Information

© 1995 by Academic Press, Inc. Received October 10, 1994; Revised January 17, 1995. Research supported by NASA. Support for R.H. at Caltech was provided under Sherman Fairchild Distinguished Scholar Program. Suggestions for improving the manuscript proferred by K. Housen and an anonymous reviewer are appreciated. Contribution 5404, Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences.

Additional details

Created:
August 20, 2023
Modified:
October 18, 2023