An Inquiry about Evidence for the Late Heavy Bombardment Clark R. Chapman & David H. Grinspoon SwRI, Boulder CO 65th Meteoritical Society Meeting (2002)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Impact Cratering Dating Nathan Marsh. Relative Dating Simple but not as informative Measures the crater densities (craters per square kilometer) Generally.
Advertisements

Interior structure, origin and evolution of the Moon Key Features of the Moon: pages
Crater Counting Chronologies ● Planetary radius determines the duration over which radioactive decay can maintain geological activity. Crater density on.
Late Heavy Bombardment Or, Kablooie!. The main piece of evidence for a lunar cataclysm comes from the radiometric ages of impact melt rocks that were.
Formation of our Moon: The Giant Impact Hypothesis Michelle Kirchoff Southwest Research Institute Center for Lunar Origin and Evolution.
What are the Astrobiological Constraints from What is Known about the Late Heavy Bombardment? What are the Astrobiological Constraints from What is Known.
The Late Veneer: constraints on composition, mass, and mixing timescales “Post-AGU” Divya Allupeddinti Beth-Ann Bell Lea Bello Ana Cernok Nilotpal Ghosh.
Surface Chronology of Phobos – The Age of Phobos and its Largest Crater Stickney 1 N. Schmedemann 1, G. Michael 1, B. A. Ivanov 2, J. Murray 3 and G. Neukum.
Clark R. Chapman (SwRI), R.G. Strom (Univ. Ariz.), S.C. Solomon (DTM, Carnegie Institution), J.W. Head III (Brown Univ.), and W.J. Merline (SwRI) Clark.
The SLAM Impact Experiment: Overview and Preliminary Thoughts Clark R. Chapman Southwest Research Institute Boulder CO SLAM Organizational Meeting SwRI.
Dynamics of the young Solar system Kleomenis Tsiganis Dept. of Physics - A.U.Th. Collaborators: Alessandro Morbidelli (OCA) Hal Levison (SwRI) Rodney Gomes.
“Rummaging through Earth’s Attic for Remains of Ancient Life” John C. Armstrong, Llyd E. Wells, Guillermo Gonzalez Icarus 2002, vol. 160 December 9, 2004.
The Universe. The Milky Way Galaxy, one of billions of other galaxies in the universe, contains about 400 billion stars and countless other objects. Why.
Mercury’s Craters How They Are And What They Are Lindsay Johannessen PTYS 495.
LPI-JSC Center for Lunar Science and Exploration 2011 Absolute Impact Ages and Cratering as a Function of Time With contributions from Timothy D. Swindle.
Geophysics of Icy Saturnian Satellites Torrence V. Johnson Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Caltech.
It’s not the energy, it’s the entropy Saturn’s age is revealed in its moons Earth’s water source is not in the meteorite collections... Is the Hadean Earth.
TERRESTRIAL PLANET FORMATION & THE FORMATION OF A WATER-RICH EARTH
Unraveling the History of the Moon
Jeff TaylorLunar Science1 Moonstruck: Illuminating Early Planetary History G. Jeffrey Taylor Hawai`i Institute of Geophysics and Planetology University.
PTYS 411 Geology and Geophysics of the Solar System Dating Planetary Surfaces.
Mass Extinction ASTR 1420 Lecture 9 Sections : 4.6, 6.4, 11.3.
Origin of the Solar System. Stars spew out 1/2 their mass as gas & dust as they die.
A coherent and comprehensive model of the evolution of the outer solar system Alessandro Morbidelli (OCA, Nice) Collaborators: R. Gomes, H. Levison, K.
Mass Distribution and Planet Formation in the Solar Nebula Steve Desch School of Earth and Space Exploration Arizona State University Lunar and Planetary.
THE LATE HEAVY BOMBARDMENT AND THE FORMATION OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM
October 13, 2004Astro 249 DAWN Asteroids: 1 Ceres and 4 Vesta By Christina O. Lee.
SPONGE n n What objects make up our solar system ?
TEXT NO 6 Questions 51 to 60 refer to the following passage:
Lecture 3 – Planetary Migration, the Moon, and the Late Heavy Bombardment Abiol 574.
ASTR 1420 Lecture 9 Sections : 4.6, 6.4, 11.3
Center for Lunar Origin and Evolution (CLOE)
Late Heavy Bombardment: Evidence From Cratering Histories of the Moon, Planets, Satellites, and Asteroids Clark R. Chapman Southwest Research Institute,
Clark R. Chapman ( SwRI ), R.G. Strom, C.I. Fassett, L.M. Prockter, J.W. Head III, S.C. Solomon, M. E. Banks, D. Baker, W.J. Merline Clark R. Chapman (
Chapter Four The Moon: The Earth’s Closest Neighbor.
Recent Developments in PLANETARY CRATERING Recent Developments in PLANETARY CRATERING Clark R. Chapman Southwest Research Institute Boulder, Colorado,
Clark R. Chapman (SwRI), R.G. Strom, J.W. Head, C.I. Fassett, W.J. Merline, S.C. Solomon, D.T. Blewett, T.R. Watters Clark R. Chapman (SwRI), R.G. Strom,
Impact Mechanics and Morphology. Impact Craters Crater: From the Greek krater meaning bowl Drop a rock into some sand (v = a few m/sec) –Physically what.
David Nesvorny David Vokrouhlicky (SwRI) Alessandro Morbidelli (CNRS) David Nesvorny David Vokrouhlicky (SwRI) Alessandro Morbidelli (CNRS) Capture of.
Dynamics of comets and the origin of the solar system Origin of solar systems - 30/06/2009 Jean-Baptiste Vincent Max-Planck-Institut für Sonnensystemforschung.
Nico, Schmedemann Department of Earth Sciences, Institute of Geological Sciences The Age and Cratering History of Phobos Comparison of two Endmember Chronologies.
Clark R. Chapman Southwest Research Inst. Boulder, Colorado, USA (member, MESSENGER Science Team) Clark R. Chapman Southwest Research Inst. Boulder, Colorado,
ASTR-1010 Planetary Astronomy Day Announcements Smartworks Chapter 6: Due Today, March 22. Smartworks Chapter 7: Due Friday, March st Quarter.
Astronomy 1010-H Planetary Astronomy Fall_2015 Day-27.
Planetary image interpretation and mapping Phil Stooke USGS map I-515.
What’s new with the Lunar Cataclysm? Tim Swindle Lunar and Planetary Lab University of Arizona Background: Kaguya image of the central part of SPA.
Week 2: When the world was young... EPSC Earth & Life History (Fall 2002)
LOOKING FOR LAKE MISSOULA!!. EARLIER MAJOR, CRATERING.
ORIGIN OF THE LATE HEAVY BOMBARDMENT OF THE TERRESTRIAL PLANETS
The Moon. Moon: Basic Facts Diameter: 3500 km (2100 miles) Average Distance: 380,000 km (240,000 miles) Distance range: 360,000 – 400,000 km Orbital eccentricity:.05.
Astronomy 1010 Planetary Astronomy Fall_2015 Day-27.
New Views on the Lunar Late Heavy Bombardment
Cratering in the Solar System William Bottke Southwest Research Institute Boulder, Colorado.
Thought Question What does the solar system look like as a whole? Why does the solar system look the way it does? Can we explain how the solar system.
Jeff Taylor Lunar cataclysm1 Lunar Bombardment History: Was There a Terminal Lunar “Cataclysm”? The concept The importance if it happened The evidence.
1 Earth and Other Planets 3 November 2015 Chapter 16 Great Idea: Earth, one of the planets that orbit the Sun, formed 4.5 billion years ago from a great.
Dynamical constraints on the nature of the Late Heavy Bombardment and models of its origin A.Morbidelli Observatoire de la Cote d’Azur, Nice, France.
Homework 1. Is there a good scientific question? 2. Is there a good explanation for why the topic/question is worthy of research? 3. Is there a good hypothesis.
Solar System.  Nebular Hypothesis: Solar System was produced by the gravitational collapse of a gas cloud – the remnant of a supernova explosion.  Concentration.
Origin of Earth and Moon PA STEM monthly meeting CCIU September 15, 2015.
Capture of Irregular Satellites during Planetary Encounters
Takashi Ito (CfCA/NAOJ, Tokyo) Renu Malhotra (LPL/U.Arizona)
Overview of the Solar System
Late Heavy Bombardment
Solar system Sergei popov.
Clark R. Chapman Southwest Research Inst. Boulder, CO USA
Lecture: Planetology Continued (cratering) Part II: Solar System
A Sample from an Ancient Sea of Impact Melt
Rising Carbon Dioxide Levels
40Ar-39Ar Dating of Apollo Impact Melts- Searching for Imbrium
Presentation transcript:

An Inquiry about Evidence for the Late Heavy Bombardment Clark R. Chapman & David H. Grinspoon SwRI, Boulder CO 65th Meteoritical Society Meeting (2002) UCLA, Los Angeles, CA Thurs. p.m., 25 July 2002 Barbara A. Cohen HIGP, Univ. Hawaii, Honolulu

Late Heavy Bombardment… or “terminal cataclysm” Proposed in 1973 by Tera et al. who noted a peak in radiometric ages of lunar samples ~ Ga Sharply declining basin-formation rate between Imbrium (3.85 Ga) and final basin, Orientale (3.82 Ga) Few rock ages, and no impact melt ages prior to 3.9 Ga (Nectaris age) Implies: short, Myr bombard- ment, but minimal basin formation between crustal formation and LHB After Wilhelms (1987) ? LHB

Proposed Dynamical Origins for LHB Outer solar system planetesimals from late- forming Uranus/Neptune (Wetherill 1975) Break-up of large asteroid Extended tail-end of accretion; remnants from terrestrial planets region Expulsion of a 5th terrestrial planet (Chambers & Lissauer 2002; Levison 2002) OSS planetesimals and asteroids perturbed by sudden expulsion of Uranus & Neptune from between Jupiter & Saturn (Levison et al. 2001)

Relevance of Impact Melts (Graham Ryder, 1990) Basin formation produces copious melts (~10% of involved materials) Smaller craters contribute few melts Melt formation efficiency increases with crater size Basins dominate involved materials because of shallow size-distribution Impact melts are produced more efficiently than rock ages are reset Therefore, age-distribution of impact melts should be robust evidence of basin formation history (given unbiased sampling)

What Happened Before Nectaris (i.e. prior to 3.90 to 3.92 Ga)? Fragmentary geology remains from earlier times. But 50% of Wilhelms’ “definite” basins pre-date Nectaris (and 70% of all “definite”+“probable”+“possible” ones). Surprisingly, no impact melts pre-date Nectaris, so none of the earlier basins formed melts… or those melts are somehow “hidden” from being collected! (Even though some pre-Nectarian rocks exist.) During the long period from crustal solidification until the oldest known basins, there may (or may not) have been a “lull” in basin formation (and thus a cataclysm). Weak contraints: Lunar crust is “intact” (depends on size-distribution) Impactor “contamination” (projectile retention efficiency)

Debate over “Cataclysm” “Stonewall” effect (Hartmann, 1975) destroys and pulverizes rocks prior to saturation Grinspoon’s (1989) 2-dimensional models concur No impact melts prior to Nectaris (Ryder, 1990) Lunar crust not pene- trated or pulverized (but constrains only top-heavy size distributions) No enrichment in meteoritic/projectile material (not robust) A Misconception...It Happened! Time Flux

Conundrum concerning Impact Melts No impact melts have been found older than the Nectaris Basin (3.92 Ga) despite the fact that 2/3rds of known basins occurred stratigraphically before Nectaris (Wilhelms, 1987). Where are their impact melts? Cohen et al. (2000) found melt clasts from 3.9 Ga extending all the way to 2.8 Ga (only 2 of 7 melt- producing “events” occurred back during the LHB). Thus, many impact melts are found dating from more recent times when we know that basins weren’t forming. Numerous early basins yield no melts; recent, in- efficient melt-production by small craters yields melts!? There is only one Conclusion: Collected impact melts are strongly biased to recent events...

Lunar, HED Rock Degassing Ages [Data summarized by Bogard (1995)] Moon The LHB, as defined by basin ages, is a narrow range (100 Myr LHB shown by pink box). Predominant lunar rock ages range from 3.6 to 4.2 Ga. (Impact melts are restricted to <3.92 Ga.) So rock ages correlate poorly with basin ages. (HED meteorite ages range from 3.2 to 4.3 Ga. So bombardment in the asteroid belt extended ~300 Myr after end of lunar rock degassings.) HED Parent Body 4.4 Time 3.3

Non-Lunar Evidence for LHB Cratered uplands on Mars/Mercury (and even Galilean satellites!) inferred to be same LHB… but absolute chronology is poorly known or unknown. ALH84001 has a ~4 Ga resetting age… but that is “statistics of one”. Peaks in resetting ages noted for some types of meteorites (HEDs, ordinary chondrites)… but age distributions differ from lunar case.

Asteroidal vs. Lunar LHB Kring & Cohen (2002) summary of meteorite de- gassing ages Very “spread out” compared with lunar LHB Somewhat “spread out” compared with lunar rock impact degassing ages Evidence is dissimilar! Different impact histories, or Different selection biases LHB Lunar rock de- gassing ages

Saturation of megaregolith would have pulverized/destroyed early rocks (Hartmann, 1975), creating artificial rock-age spike. but “it is patently not the case” that all rocks would have been reset or “pulverized to fine powder” (Hartmann et al., 2000) Grinspoon’s (1989) mathematical model seemed to verify the stonewall effect. but it is a 2-D model; he converts 100% of crater floor to melt while the real percent is much less However, if melt preferentially veneers surface, as is generally expected to be true, then the 2-D model may approximate the 3-D reality. A New Look at the “Stonewall”

We Need to Model the 3-D Emplacement/Collection of Melts Model needs: (building on work by L. Haskin and students) %-tage melt production as function of diameter 3-D mapping of emplacement of melts and other ejecta time-history of megaregolith excavation, deposition, and “churning”, varying the impactor size-distribution gardening/impact destruction near surface over last ~3.5 Gyr analysis of collection/selection criteria and biases Some qualitative sampling biases are clear: if each new basin distributes its melts uniformly throughout the volume of the megaregolith, and churns earlier melts uniformly, then impact melts collected at the surface should sample the basin formation history in an unbiased fashion. If each new basin distributes melts in a surface veneer, and older melts are covered by ejecta blankets, then surface sampling will be dominated by most recent basin.

LHB Conclusions If lunar basin formation sharply declined from 3.85 Ga (Imbrium) to ~3.82 Ga (Orientale, the very last one), then dynamics of LHB source bodies are strongly constrained. Until the processes that cause sampling bias for impact melts are understood (3-D models), absence of melts from ancient times provides a minimal constraint on the pre-Nectaris bombardment rate. Hence, whether LHB was a “cataclysm” or just an inflection in a declining flux remains unknown. Mismatch in lunar/asteroidal age histograms means (a) different LHBs or (b) different sampling biases. We can’t conclude anything about (a) until (b) is understood. But how robust is THIS chronology???