日時: 2010 年 1月 12日(火) 13:30 - 15:00 (レクチャー1)
場所:

神戸大自然科学総合研究棟3号館609号室

講演者: Sarah T. Stewart-Mukhopadhyay (ハーバード大)
タイトル: Open questions about the formation of the largest impact craters
abstract: Impact craters are the most common landform on planetary surfaces; however, the mechanics of the end stages of the formation of large craters is not fully understood. The final stage of crater formation involves the collapse of a hemispherical transient cavity. Around small craters, the limited amount of collapse preserves a bowl-shaped cavity. In contrast, the observed shallow depths and complex inner morphologies of large craters require very low shear strength in the collapsing material. Because the observed amount of collapse cannot be reproduced using quasi-static (laboratory) values for the frictional strength of fractured rock, a temporary weakening mechanism is necessary. I will present simulations that investigate the hypothesis that craters collapse along a network of impact-generated faults that weaken during long displacements at high slip velocities via, for example, frictional melting. The model reproduces the major geologic features observed around the largest terrestrial craters (Vredefort, Sudbury, and Chicxulub), including shallow depths, fault structures, frictional melt distributions, and deep-seated central uplifts. Finally, I will raise open questions related to the formation of multi-ring impact basins.

Reading:

Senft, L. E., and S. T. Stewart.

Dynamic Fault Weakening and the Formation of Large Impact Craters.

Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 287, 471-482,
doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2009.08.033, 2009.

日時: 2010 年 1月 12日(火) 15:00 - 16:30 (レクチャー2)
場所:

神戸大自然科学総合研究棟3号館609号室

講演者: Sarah T. Stewart-Mukhopadhyay (ハーバード大)
タイトル: Shock wave experiments in ice: a focus on phase changes
abstract: Laboratory shock wave experiments provide fundamental data to understand the response of ice during planetary impact cratering events. I will describe laboratory measurements on phase changes in ice and discuss their implications for impact-induced melting and vaporization on planets.

Readings:

a. Boslough, M.B. and J.R. Asay (1993) High-pressure Shock Compression of Solids, Springer-Verlag: New York, p. 7-42.

b. Stewart, S.T., and T. J. Ahrens. Shock Properties of H2O ice. Journal of Geophysical Research - Planets, 110, E03055,
doi:10.1029/2004JE002305, 2005.

c. Stewart, S. T., A. Seifter, and A. W. Obst. Shocked H2O Ice: Thermal Emission Measurements and the Criteria for Phase Changes during Impact Events. Geophysical Research Letters, 35, L23203,
doi:10.1029/2008GL035947, 2008.

日時: 2010 年 1月 13日(水) 14:00 - 15:30 (レクチャー3)
場所:

神戸大自然科学総合研究棟3号館609号室

講演者: Sarah T. Stewart-Mukhopadhyay (ハーバード大)
タイトル: Impact cratering on icy satellites
abstract: Impact craters on icy satellites display a wide range of morphologies, some of which have no counterpart on rocky bodies. Numerical simulation studies have struggled to reproduce the diversity of features, such as central pits and transitions in crater depth with increasing diameter, observed on the icy satellites around Jupiter. The transitions in crater depth (at diameters of about 26 and 150 km on Ganymede and Callisto) have been interpreted as reflecting subsurface structure. I will present models of the formation of craters with diameters between 400 m and about 200 km on Ganymede using different subsurface temperature profiles. The calculations include recent improvements in the model equation of state for H2O and quasi-static strength parameters for ice. The shock-induced formation of dense high-pressure polymorphs (ices VI and VII) creates a gap in the crater excavation flow, which I call discontinuous excavation. For craters larger than about 20 km, discontinuous excavation concentrates a hot plug of material (>270 K and mostly on the melting curve) in the center of the crater floor. The size and occurrence of the hot plug are in good agreement with the observed characteristics of central pit craters, suggesting that a genetic link exists between them. I will present depth vs. diameter curves for different internal temperature profiles and discuss the implications for subsurface structure.

Reading:

Modeling the morphological diversity of impact craters on icy satellites by L. E. Senft and S. T. Stewart, Icarus, in revision, 2009.