2016
DOI: 10.1038/nature19829
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Quantifying crater production and regolith overturn on the Moon with temporal imaging

Abstract: Random bombardment by comets, asteroids and associated fragments form and alter the lunar regolith and other rocky surfaces. The accumulation of impact craters over time is of fundamental use in evaluating the relative ages of geologic units. Crater counts and radiometric ages from returned samples provide constraints with which to derive absolute model ages for unsampled units on the Moon and other Solar System objects. However, although studies of existing craters and returned samples offer insight into the … Show more

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Cited by 144 publications
(186 citation statements)
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“…The power index of the reworking depth ( B) must be negative and v must be <2 for the model to describe physical reality—small, shallowly overturning impacts are more likely than large, deeply overturning impacts. Fortunately, most predictions of CPFs for secondary craters, which dominate the mechanical churning of the uppermost meter or so, have relatively steep power indices ( 4; e.g., Bierhaus et al, ; McEwen et al, ; Speyerer et al, ), satisfying the requirement that v be <2.…”
Section: Gardening Model: Updates To the Treatment Of Cumulative Cratersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The power index of the reworking depth ( B) must be negative and v must be <2 for the model to describe physical reality—small, shallowly overturning impacts are more likely than large, deeply overturning impacts. Fortunately, most predictions of CPFs for secondary craters, which dominate the mechanical churning of the uppermost meter or so, have relatively steep power indices ( 4; e.g., Bierhaus et al, ; McEwen et al, ; Speyerer et al, ), satisfying the requirement that v be <2.…”
Section: Gardening Model: Updates To the Treatment Of Cumulative Cratersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such impacts are of considerable relevance in an astrophysical context. The surfaces of regolith-covered moons and asteroids are constantly subjected to impacts by dust particles and micro-meteorites, with consequences on the composition and mechanical properties of these surfaces (Schwartz et al 2014;Speyerer et al 2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, most new features created by impact, and this young, have also shown thermophysical properties consistent with lunar cold spots (Bandfield et al, ; Hayne et al, ). Perhaps, an argument against a younger age of origin (or at least a contemporary origin) is that none of these anomalies exhibit characteristics of cold spots recently discovered and predominantly associated with young, small craters and their ejecta (at least in part, the area of cold spots have been suggested to present a volume of material more than could realistically fit back into the associated crater; Hayne et al, ; Speyerer et al, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%