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  3. Dimorphos’s Material Properties and Estimates of Crater Size from the DART Impact
 

Dimorphos’s Material Properties and Estimates of Crater Size from the DART Impact

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/86071
Date of Publication
February 1, 2025
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Space Research and Pl...

Physics Institute, Sp...

Author
Stickle, Angela M.
Kumamoto, Kathryn M.
Graninger, Dawn M.
DeCoster, Mallory E.
Caldwell, Wendy K.
Pearl, Jason M.
Owen, J. Michael
Barnouin, Olivier
Collins, Gareth S.
Daly, R. Terik
Herreros, Isabel
Ormö, Jens
Sunshine, Jessica
Ernst, Carolyn M.
Hirabayashi, Toshi
Marchi, Simone
Parro, Laura
Agrusa, Harrison
Bruck Syal, Megan
Chabot, Nancy L.
Cheng, Andy F.
Davison, Thomas M.
Dotto, Elisabetta
Fahenstock, Eugene G.
Ferrari, Fabio
Jutzi, Martinorcid-logo
Space Research and Planetology Physics - Impacts
Physics Institute, Space Research and Planetary Sciences
Lucchetti, Alice
Luther, Robert
Mitra, Nilanjan
Pajola, Maurizio
Raducan, Sabina
Space Research and Planetology Physics - Impacts
Physics Institute, Space Research and Planetary Sciences
Ramesh, KT
Rivkin, Andrew S.
Rossi, Alessandro
Sánchez, Paul
Schwartz, Stephen R.
Soldini, Stefania
Steckloff, Jordan K.
Tusberti, Filippo
Wünnemann, Kai
Zhang, Yun
Series
The Planetary Science Journal
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
2632-3338
Publisher
IOP Publishing
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.3847/psj/ad944d
Description
On 2022 September 26, the Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) spacecraft intentionally collided with Dimorphos, the moon of the binary asteroid system 65803 Didymos. This collision provided the first full-scale test of a kinetic impactor for planetary defense. Images from DART's DRACO camera revealed Dimorphos to be an oblate spheroid covered in boulders of varying sizes and shapes. Very little was known about Dimorphos prior to DART's impact, including its shape, structure, and material properties. Approach observations and those following the DART impact have provided crucial knowledge that narrows the parameter space relevant to modeling the impact into Dimorphos. Here we present the results of a suite of hydrocode simulations of the DART impact on Dimorphos. Despite remaining uncertainties, initial models of DART's kinetic impact provide important information about the results of DART (e.g., potential crater size and morphology, ejecta mass) and the properties of Dimorphos. Simulations here suggest that Dimorphos has near-surface strength ranging from a few Pascals to tens of kPa, which corresponds to crater sizes of ∼40–60 m. Simulated crater sizes provide a crucial comparison metric for the European Space Agency Hera mission when it arrives at the Didymos system. Hera's measurement of crater size in combination with measurement of Dimorphos's mass will allow us to assess our simulations and provide the information needed to make the DART impact experiment both the first test of a planetary defense mitigation mission and the first full-scale planetary defense simulation validation exercise.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/206828
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Stickle_2025_Planet._Sci._J._6_38.pdftextAdobe PDF2.76 MBAttribution (CC BY 4.0)publishedOpen
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