Abstract

High-resolution mapping of Ceres, Vesta and the icy satellites of Saturn, Uranus and Pluto reveals a rich variety of well-preserved impact crater morphologies on these low gravity bodies. These objects provide a natural laboratory to study effects of composition on crater formation processes under similar surface gravity conditions (though mean impact velocities vary by several factors). Simple craters occur on all these bodies but subtle differences in morphology on Ceres and Vesta are recognized. Immature complex craters (with large floor mounds but not terraces or conical central peaks) occur on Vesta and while smaller than predicted are consistent with its silicate composition. Asymmetric simple craters (with incomplete scarp development) on all bodies are likely related to differential overburden stresses in the rim, and their occurrence is consistent with lower crustal strength on icy bodies including Ceres. Immature and mature complex craters exhibit increasing degrees of complexity, including spiral floor deformation patterns (related to failure in converging floor material), central peaks, and impact melt. Cerean crater morphologic types and simple-complex transition diameters are smaller than on Vesta but similar to those on icy satellites, indicating a much weaker rheology for Ceres' outer layers under impact conditions. These are consistent with geophysical indications of a low-density water ice and probably clathrate rich outer shell. Fluidized floor deposits (impact melt or melt-solid mixtures) are significant in craters >25 km across on Ceres but absent on Saturn satellites. Central pit craters are common on Ceres (at diameters of ~75 to 150 km consistent with gravity scaling from the larger Galilean satellites) but are absent on Saturnian satellites and Charon. The contrasting impact melt and central pit behaviors on Ceres and Saturn's moons is contrary to expectation given the higher impact velocities at Saturn but might be related to lower internal temperatures, or the higher fraction of non-ice material on Ceres. The correlation or scaling of transition diameters to surface gravity is near −0.65 rather than −1, perhaps due to increased porosity on lower gravity bodies. The fundamental similarity of crater morphologies on Ceres and icy satellites, however, indicates that the weaker rheology of water ice results in similar craters even if the non-(ice+clathrate) components are as high as ~30 vol%.

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