论文标题
通过热应力破坏土星环颗粒
Disruption of Saturn's ring particles by thermal stress
论文作者
论文摘要
航天器和地面观测表明,土星的主要环缺乏大于10 m的颗粒。已经提出了卫星/彗星的潮汐或碰撞破坏作为主环的起源。但是,由于水冰和岩石的机械强度很高,土星的潮汐不能将km大小的碎片磨碎到子计大小的颗粒中。问题是为什么当前环中没有留下如此大的颗粒。众所周知,由昼夜和季节性温度变化引起的热应力会导致巨石的风化和碎片化,并导致月球和陆地行星上的灰尘和岩石产生,然后这种热应力会破坏大于临界半径的颗粒,而临界半径大,而差异不能小于临界半径。在这项研究中,我们检查了作用于土星环颗粒的热应力的作用。我们发现,热应力可以研磨大于10-20 m的多孔环颗粒,这解释了在土星环中缺乏大于10 m的颗粒。同样,对于天王星的epsilon环可以采用热应力的碎裂。此外,由昼夜或季节温度变化引起的热应力作用在冰冷卫星和小行星表面上的巨石上可能起重要作用,在其大小的演变中起重要作用。我们的计算解释了冰冷卫星上缺乏巨石,除了地质活跃的省份(例如,田野的老虎条纹),在最近的地质活动中提供了巨石。我们预测,未来的观察结果会发现围绕欧罗巴地质活动裂缝的许多巨石。
Spacecraft and ground-based observations show that the main rings of Saturn lack particles larger than 10 m. Tidal or collisional destruction of satellites/comets have been proposed as the origin of the main rings; however, Saturn's tide alone cannot grind km-sized fragments into submeter-sized particles because of the high mechanical strength of water ice and rock. The question arises as to why such large particles are not left in the current ring. It is known that thermal stress induced by diurnal and seasonal temperature variations can cause weathering and fragmentation of boulders and contribute to dust and regolith production on the Moon and terrestrial planets, and then such thermal stress can break particles larger than a critical radius while cannot smaller than the critical radius. In this study, we examined the role of thermal stress acting on Saturn's ring particles. We found that thermal stress can grind porous ring particles larger than 10-20 m, which explains the lack of particles larger than 10 m in Saturn's ring. Also, fragmentation by thermal stress can be adoptable for the Epsilon rings of Uranus. Furthermore, thermal stress caused by diurnal or seasonal temperature variation acting on boulders on surfaces of icy satellites and asteroids may play an important role in the evolution of their sizes. Our calculations explain the lack of boulders on icy satellites, except in the geologically active provinces such as the tiger stripes of Enceladus, where boulders are supplied by recent geological activity. We predict that future observations can find numerous boulders around Europa's geologically active cracks.