Yuty (crater)

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Yuty
Mars Yuty NASA 1977 Viking1.jpg
Yuty seen by the Viking 1 orbiter in 1977
Planet Mars
Region Tiu Valles
Coordinates 22°24′N34°12′W / 22.4°N 34.2°W / 22.4; -34.2
Quadrangle Oxia Palus
Diameter 19.06 km (11.84 mi)
Eponym Yuty, Paraguay
CTX mosaic (MRO) Yuty crater P07 003802 2025 XI 22N033W P14 006637 2025 XI 22N034W.jpg
CTX mosaic (MRO)

Yuty is a crater on Mars in Chryse Planitia, named after the town of Yuty in Paraguay. It measures approximately 19 kilometres (12 miles) in diameter, and is surrounded by complex ejecta lobes, which are a distinctive characteristic of martian impact craters. [1] [2]

Contents

Description

Many craters at equatorial and mid-latitudes on Mars have this form of ejecta morphology, which is thought to arise when the impacting object melts ice in the subsurface. Liquid water in the ejected material forms a muddy slurry that flows along the surface, producing the characteristic lobe shapes. [3] [4] The presence of a pre-existing, partially buried crater on Yuty's southwestern rim is evidence that the ejecta is thin. [5]

Yuty is located in the general region of the Viking 1 landing site. It was well photographed by the Viking orbiters in the 1970s, and as a consequence its image appears in many books and articles of the era as a type example of Martian impact crater morphology.

The distinctive lobate ejecta pattern of craters like Yuty gave rise to a confusing terminology among Mars researchers. Sometimes informally called "splosh craters", Yuty-type craters have also been called petal or flower craters and fluidized ejecta craters. [6] More commonly they are called rampart craters because the ejecta lobes terminate in curved ridges or ramparts. In today's preferred terminology, [7] Yuty is described as a multiple-layer ejecta (MLE) rampart crater because its ejecta is deposited in a series of three or more discrete layers. [8] The presence of multiple ejecta layers may reflect impact into multiple layers of ice or a subsurface layer saturated with liquid water. The exact process is still somewhat controversial. [9]

Yuty is a complex crater as opposed to a simple (bowl-shaped) crater. Complex craters are distinguished by having a raised central peak complex and terracing along the inner wall. On Mars, complex crater morphology begins to appear at crater diameters between 5 and 8 km (3.6 to 4.8 miles). The size of the central peak in Yuty is larger than central peaks in comparable craters on other planets. This appears typical of complex craters on Mars and, like the lobate ejecta patterns, may be due to geologic conditions in the subsurface that are unique to Mars (e.g., presence of ice). [10]

See also

Related Research Articles

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hesperia Planum</span> Broad lava plain in the southern highlands of the planet Mars

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Amazonian (Mars)</span> Time period on Mars

The Amazonian is a geologic system and time period on the planet Mars characterized by low rates of meteorite and asteroid impacts and by cold, hyperarid conditions broadly similar to those on Mars today. The transition from the preceding Hesperian period is somewhat poorly defined. The Amazonian is thought to have begun around 3 billion years ago, although error bars on this date are extremely large. The period is sometimes subdivided into the Early, Middle, and Late Amazonian. The Amazonian continues to the present day.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Terrain softening</span> Terrain with smoothly rpunded edges

The landscape polewards of around 30 degrees latitude on Mars has a distinctively different appearance to that nearer the equator, and is said to have undergone terrain softening. Softened terrain lacks the sharp ridge crests seen near the equator, and is instead smoothly rounded. This rounding is thought to be caused by high concentrations of water ice in soils. The term was coined in 1986 by Steve Squyres and Michael Carr from examining imagery from the Viking missions to Mars.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">LARLE crater</span> Class of Martian impact craters

A low-aspect-ratio layered ejecta crater is a class of impact crater found on the planet Mars. This class of impact craters was discovered by Northern Arizona University scientist Professor Nadine Barlow and Dr. Joseph Boyce from the University of Hawaii in October 2013. Barlow described this class of craters as having a "thin-layered outer deposit" surpassing "the typical range of ejecta". "The combination helps vaporize the materials and create a base flow surge. The low aspect ratio refers to how thin the deposits are relative to the area they cover", Barlow said. The scientists used data from continuing reconnaissance of Mars using the old Mars Odyssey orbiter and the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. They discovered 139 LARLE craters ranging in diameter from 1.0 to 12.2 km, with 97% of the LARLE craters found poleward of 35N and 40S. The remaining 3% mainly traced in the equatorial Medusae Fossae Formation.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Expanded crater</span>

An expanded crater is a type of secondary impact crater. Large impacts often create swarms of small secondary craters from the debris that is blasted out as a consequence of the impact. Studies of a type of secondary craters, called expanded craters, have given insights into places where abundant ice may be present in the ground. Expanded craters have lost their rims, this may be because any rim that was once present has collapsed into the crater during expansion or, lost its ice, if composed of ice. Excess ice is widespread throughout the Martian mid-latitudes, especially in Arcadia Planitia. In this region, are many expanded secondary craters that probably form from impacts that destabilize a subsurface layer of excess ice, which subsequently sublimates. With sublimation the ice changes directly from a solid to gaseous form. In the impact, the excess ice is broken up, resulting in an increase in surface area. Ice will sublimate much more if there is more surface area. After the ice disappears into the atmosphere, dry soil material will collapse and cause the crater diameter to become larger.

There are a number of different types of craters that have been observed and studied on Mars. Many of them are shaped by the effects of impacts into ice-rich ground.

References

  1. "Yuty (crater)". Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. USGS Astrogeology Research Program.
  2. Carr, M. H.; Saunders, R. S.; Strom R. G. Geology of the Terrestrial Planets. NASA Scientific and Technical Information Branch: Washington DC, 1984, p. 220.
  3. Kiefer, Walter S. (2004). "Maximum Impact – Impact Craters in the Solar System". NASA Solar System Exploration. Archived from the original on 2006-09-29. Retrieved 2007-05-14.
  4. Hartmann, W. K. A Traveler’s Guide to Mars: The Mysterious Landscapes of the Red Planet; Workman: New York, 2003, pp. 99–100.
  5. Carr, M. H.; Saunders, R. S.; Strom R. G. Geology of the Terrestrial Planets; NASA Scientific and Technical Information Branch: Washington DC, 1984, p. 221.
  6. Carr, M. H. The Surface of Mars; Cambridge University Press: New York, 2006, p. 33.
  7. Boyce, J. M. The Smithsonian Book of Mars; Konecky & Konecky: Old Saybrook, CT, 2008, p. 203.
  8. Barlow, N. G. et al. (2000). "Standardizing the Nomenclature of Martian Impact Crater Ejecta Morphologies". J. Geophys. Res., 105 (E10).
  9. Barlow, N. G.; Sharpton, V.; Kuzmin, R. O. "Impact Structures on Earth and Mars", in The Geology of Mars: Evidence from Earth-Based Analogs, Chapman, M. G., Ed.; Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK, 2007, pp. 58–59.
  10. Boyce, J. M. The Smithsonian Book of Mars; Konecky & Konecky: Old Saybrook, CT, 2008, p. 201.