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Abstract The surfaces of airless bodies like the Moon are bombarded by a steady stream of small impactors that lead to erosion of the topography over time. However, the rate of degradation from small impacts, a key parameter in interpreting the ages of present-day lunar surface features, is not well constrained. Here we demonstrate, using a numerical mass transport model, that impact erosion is a nonlinear diffusion process, in contrast to past studies of crater degradation that have assumed that the downslope mass flux of ejecta is linearly proportional to hillslope gradient. Nonlinearity is a consequence of the asymmetric shape of ejecta blankets on sloped surfaces, and as a result, the degradation rate on steep slopes is over 40% greater than on nearly flat surfaces. Using measurements of the morphology and formation rate of small primary and secondary craters, the kilometer-scale lunar landscape diffusivity is computed and compared to the value inferred from topographic profiles of degraded craters. We show that the abundance of decameter-scale craters forming on the Moon over the past decade is consistent with small impacts dominating the erosion of the lunar landscape, but only if the primary size−frequency distribution remains steep down to the submillimeter scale.
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P. O'Brien
Planetary Science Institute
Shane Byrne
Planetary Science Institute
The Planetary Science Journal
University of Arizona
Planetary Science Institute
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O'Brien et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a01f3ad8d267ec217d8caca — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3847/psj/ac9130