And now a word from our optimistic colleagues:

<http://arxiv.org/abs/0909.3875>

Dynamical erosion of the asteroid belt and implications for large impacts in 
the inner solar system

Authors: David A. Minton, Renu Malhotra
(Submitted on 21 Sep 2009)

    Abstract: 
The cumulative effects of weak resonant and secular perturbations by the major 
planets produce chaotic behavior of asteroids on long timescales. Dynamical 
chaos is the dominant loss mechanism for asteroids with diameters D > 10 km in 
the current asteroid belt. In a numerical analysis of the long term evolution 
of test particles in the main asteroid belt region, we find that the dynamical 
loss history of test particles from this region is well described with a 
logarithmic decay law. In our simulations the loss rate function that is 
established at t = 1 My persists with little deviation to at least t = 4 Gy. 

Our study indicates that the asteroid belt region has experienced a significant 
amount of depletion due to this dynamical erosion - having lost as much as ~50% 
of the large asteroids - since 1 My after the establishment of the current 
dynamical structure of the asteroid belt. Because the dynamical depletion of 
asteroids from the main belt is approximately logarithmic, an equal amount of 
depletion occurred in the time interval 10-200 My as in 0.2-4 Gy, roughly ~30% 
of the current number of large asteroids in the main belt over each interval. 

We find that asteroids escaping from the main belt due to dynamical chaos have 
an Earth impact probability of ~0.3%. Our model suggests that the rate of 
impacts from large asteroids has declined by a factor of 3 over the last 3 Gy, 
and that the present-day impact flux of D > 10 km objects on the terrestrial 
planets is roughly an order of magnitude less than estimates currently in use 
in crater chronologies and impact hazard risk assessments.
______________________________________________
http://www.meteoritecentral.com
Meteorite-list mailing list
[email protected]
http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list

Reply via email to