The Planetary Science Journal (Jan 2024)

Ejecta Blankets at Small Craters on the Moon

  • Trevor Austin,
  • Mark Robinson,
  • Prasun Mahanti

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/PSJ/ad3827
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 5
p. 114

Abstract

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Impact-derived ejecta covers most of the lunar surface, originating from recent impacts through to the beginning of the geologic record. Despite how common ejecta is, accurate measurements of ejecta thickness are difficult to obtain, and existing estimates of ejecta thickness vary widely. This study uses excavation by meter-scale impacts on the fresh ejecta blankets of larger, kilometer-scale impacts to make point measurements of ejecta thickness. We estimate ejecta thickness at the rims of 73 lunar craters (0.1–4.8 km diameter) and create isopach maps of ejecta thickness for three craters. We derive an equation for ejecta thickness, $t=0.14\pm 0.062{R}^{(0.77\pm 0.080)}{\left(r/R\right)}^{(-B)}$ , where r is the horizontal distance from the center of the crater, R is the center-to-rim crater radius, and B describes the rate at which ejecta thickness decays with radial distance. Our average value for B (2.8 ± 0.1) is similar to previous work, though we observe that B can vary significantly within an ejecta blanket.

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