Massive, Ancient Asteroid May Have Smashed Into One of Jupiter's Moons
One researcher thinks the asteroid, which is thought to have hit Ganymede 4 billion years ago, was 20 times larger than the one that wiped out Earth's dinosaurs.
By Adrianna Nine September 6, 2024
https://www.extremetech.com/science/mas ... ters-moons
Aside from being the biggest of Jupiter's 95 moons, Ganymede is best known for its axial tilt and deep furrows. These characteristics—particularly the rivets that lend Ganymede its unusual topography—have long puzzled researchers, calling into question the satellite's evolutionary history. Now, a scientist in Japan thinks he's uncovered the cause of both Ganymede's tilt and texture. The answer, he says, lies 4 billion years in the past.
According to Naoyuki Hirata, an assistant professor of planetology at Kobe University, the heftiest of Jupiter's Galilean moons likely experienced a smack from a massive asteroid when our own planet was still very young. Hirata's theory, which he details in a new paper for Scientific Reports, is based on an extensive system of furrows that mimic how cracks spread outward from a glass impact. The central point of this system sits along Ganymede's rotational axis, implying that something might have struck Ganymede's surface, producing changes to the moon's topography and tilt.