The sublimative evolution of (486958) Arrokoth

2020 
Abstract We consider the history of New Horizons target (486958) Arrokoth in the context of its sublimative evolution. Shortly after the Sun's protoplanetary disk (PPD) cleared, the newly intense sunlight sparked a sublimative period in Arrokoth's early history that lasted for ~10–100 Myr. Although this sublimation was too weak to significantly alter Arrokoth's spin state, it could drive mass transport around the surface significant enough to erase topographic features on length scales of ~10–100 m. This includes craters up to ~50–500 m in diameter, which suggests that the majority of Arrokoth's craters may not be primordial (dating from the merger of Arrokoth's lobes), but rather could date from after the end of this sublimative period. Thereafter, Arrokoth entered a Quiescent Period (which lasts to the present day), in which volatile production rates are at least 13 orders of magnitude less than the ~1024 molecules/s detection limit of the New Horizons spacecraft (Lisse et al. 2020). This is insufficient to drive either mass transport or sublimative torques. These results suggest that the observed surface of Arrokoth is not primordial, but rather dates from the Quiescent Period. By contrast, the inability of sublimative torques to meaningfully alter Arrokoth's rotation state suggests that its shape is indeed primordial, and its observed rotation is representative of its spin state after formation.
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