Abstract
Many boulders on (101955) Bennu, a near-Earth rubble pile asteroid, show
signs of in situ disaggregation and exfoliation, indicating that thermal
fatigue plays an important role in its landscape evolution. Observations
of particle ejections from its surface also show it to be an active
asteroid, though the driving mechanism of these events is yet to be
determined. Exfoliation has been shown to mobilize disaggregated
particles in terrestrial environments, suggesting that it may be capable
of ejecting material from Bennu’s surface. We investigate the nature of
thermal fatigue on the asteroid, and the efficacy of fatigue-driven
exfoliation as a mechanism for generating asteroid activity, by
performing finite element modeling of stress fields induced in boulders
from diurnal cycling. We develop a model to predict the spacing of
exfoliation fractures, and the number and speed of particles that may be
ejected during exfoliation events. We find that crack spacing ranges
from ~1 mm to 10 cm and disaggregated particles have
ejection speeds up to ~2 m/s. Exfoliation events are
most likely to occur in the late afternoon. These predictions are
consistent with observed ejection events at Bennu and indicate that
thermal fatigue is a viable mechanism for driving asteroid activity.
Crack propagation rates and ejection speeds are greatest at perihelion
when the diurnal temperature variation is largest, suggesting that
events should be more energetic and more frequent when closer to the
Sun. Annual thermal stresses that arise in large boulders may influence
the spacing of exfoliation cracks or frequency of ejection events.