Abstract

AbstractMany bodies in the outer solar system are theorized to have an ice shell with a different subsurface material below, be it chondritic, regolith, or a subsurface ocean. This layering can have a significant influence on the morphology of impact craters. Accordingly, we have undertaken laboratory hypervelocity impact experiments on a range of multilayered targets, with interiors of water, sand, and basalt. Impact experiments were undertaken using impact speeds in the range of 0.8–5.3 km s−1, a 1.5 mm Al ball bearing projectile, and an impact incidence of 45°. The surface ice crust had a thickness between 5 and 50 mm, i.e., some 3–30 times the projectile diameter.The thickness of the ice crust as well as the nature of the subsurface layer (liquid, well consolidated, etc.) have a marked effect on the morphology of the resulting impact crater, with thicker ice producing a larger crater diameter (at a given impact velocity), and the crater diameter scaling with impact speed to the power 0.72 for semi‐infinite ice, but with 0.37 for thin ice. The density of the subsurface material changes the structure of the crater, with flat crater floors if there is a dense, well‐consolidated subsurface layer (basalt) or steep, narrow craters if there is a less cohesive subsurface (sand). The associated faulting in the ice surface is also dependent on ice thickness and the substrate material.We find that the ice layer (in impacts at 5 km s−1) is effectively semi‐infinite if its thickness is more than 15.5 times the projectile diameter. Below this, the crater diameter is reduced by 4% for each reduction in ice layer thickness equal to the impactor diameter. Crater depth is also affected. In the ice thickness region, 7–15.5 times the projectile diameter, the crater shape in the ice is modified even when the subsurface layer is not penetrated. For ice thicknesses, <7 times the projectile diameter, the ice layer is breached, but the nature of the resulting crater depends heavily on the subsurface material. If the subsurface is noncohesive (loose) material, a crater forms in it. If it is dense, well‐consolidated basalt, no crater forms in the exposed subsurface layer.

Highlights

  • Impact craters are a common geological feature in the solar system (Hartmann 1977)

  • The thickness of the surface ice layer ranged between 10 mm, which when normalized to projectile diameter of 1.5 mm is 6.7, and 50 mm (33.3)

  • We have explored the influence of the ice layer thickness on the resulting crater morphology of an impact in a variety of impact scenarios described in the results section

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Summary

Introduction

Impact craters are a common geological feature in the solar system (Hartmann 1977). The study of these features, along with an understanding of the cratering mechanics that form them, can aid in our understanding of the internal structure and evolutionary history of the different planetary bodies and satellites (Barlow 2015). Ice surfaces are numerous throughout the solar system, including polar caps and permafrost of the terrestrial planets Earth and Mars (Tanaka and Scott 1987), and even in constant shadowed regions on the Moon (Hayne et al 2015) and Mercury (Chabot et al 2012). This means that impacts on Mars are not just into regolith-covered basement rock, but potentially

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