NASA's Dawn Mission Inspires New Insights Into Gullies on Asteroid Vesta - Clarksville Online - Clarksville News, Sports, Events and Information


NASA's Dawn Mission Inspires New Insights Into Gullies on Asteroid Vesta - Clarksville Online - Clarksville News, Sports, Events and Information

Pasadena, CA - Pocked with craters, the surfaces of many celestial bodies in our solar system provide clear evidence of a 4.6-billion-year battering by meteoroids and other space debris. However, in some worlds, including the giant asteroid Vesta that NASA's Dawn mission explored, the surfaces also contain deep channels or gullies whose origins are not fully understood.

A prime hypothesis holds that they formed from dry debris flows driven by geophysical processes, such as meteoroid impacts, and changes in temperature due to Sun exposure. A recent NASA-funded study, however, provides some evidence that impacts on Vesta may have triggered a less-obvious geologic process: sudden and brief flows of water that carved gullies and deposited fans of sediment.

By using lab equipment to mimic conditions on Vesta, the study, which appeared in Planetary Science Journal, detailed for the first time what the liquid could be made of and how long it would flow before freezing.

Although the existence of frozen brine deposits on Vesta is unconfirmed, scientists have previously hypothesized that meteoroid impacts could have exposed and melted ice that lay under the surface of worlds like Vesta. In that scenario, flows resulting from this process could have etched gullies and other surface features that resemble those on Earth.

But how could airless worlds -- celestial bodies without atmospheres and exposed to the intense vacuum of space -- host liquids on the surface long enough for them to flow? Such a process would run contrary to the understanding that liquids quickly destabilize in a vacuum, changing to a gas when the pressure drops.

"Not only do impacts trigger a flow of liquid on the surface, the liquids are active long enough to create specific surface features," said project leader and planetary scientist Jennifer Scully of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, where the experiments were conducted. "But for how long? Most liquids become unstable quickly on these airless bodies, where the vacuum of space is unyielding."

The critical component turns out to be sodium chloride -- table salt. The experiments found that in conditions like those on Vesta, pure water froze almost instantly, while briny liquids stayed fluid for at least an hour. "That's long enough to form the flow-associated features identified on Vesta, which were estimated to require up to a half-hour," said lead author Michael J. Poston of the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio.

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