The same population of space  rocks that battered Earth's moon during the early days of the solar system also  slammed the huge asteroid Vesta, scientists say.
While the cosmic bombardment  – which occurred when Jupiter and Saturn shifted orbits – has been known for a  while, this is the first time scientists found evidence of it on Vesta, one of  the biggest asteroids in the solar system.
NASA Apollo astronauts collected  evidence of the bombardment on the moon during the lunar landing missions of  the 1960s and 1970s. On Earth, erosion washed away most of the evidence of the  violent chapter during the solar system's formation, researchers said.
                                                                                                    
"We wanted to study the evolution  of the solar system. That was the main topic. So we tried to tackle that with a  different scenario approach," said Simone Marchi, who is with the NASA  Lunar Science Institute in Boulder, Colo., told SPACE.com. 
But it was a surprise to find  that the moon and Vesta share the same bombardment history, NASA officials said  in a statement. The discovery found that the same population of rocks that  etched craters on the moon also affected the asteroid belt's history.
The research, led by Marchi,  appears in Sunday's (March 24) issue of the journal Nature Geoscience.
Heavy cosmic artillery
At 319 miles (523  kilometers), Vesta is big enough for an amateur using binocularsto see it. It  is so large that it is considered by some scientists as a  "protoplanet," or large body that is similar in size to the genesis  of the planets in the solar system today.When the solar system was still  forming, some planets experienced a sort of dynamic instability as they orbited  around the young sun. It was at this period of time that Jupiter and Saturn  began moving in their orbits, according to the Nice model of planet formation.
The planets' movements —  which took place in only about a million years or so — spurred what is now  known as the Late Heavy Bombardment. This coincides with the time that life  began to arise on Earth roughly 3.9 billion years ago. Icy and rocky bodies  careened into the inner solar system, pummelling the moon, the Earth and other  large objects.
Asteroids ejected into  high-speed planetary-crossing paths, by their nature, should only have a  lifetime of a few tens of millions of years before crashing.
Scientists said it was  unlikely that they all were ejected at once. Rather, they were moved in periods  stretching over hundreds of millions of years as the planets moved.
The planets' movements  carried some asteroids into the inner solar system. The planets also altered  the orbits of other asteroids that, after their orbits coincided with other  bodies, eventually were kicked out into new orbits veering toward the sun.
Melting rock
Simulations showed that the  greatest bombardment on Vesta happened between 4.1 billion and 4.55 billion  years ago, as the mass of the young asteroid belt was at its highest. However,  only 0.2 percent of impacts was high enough to melt the underlying rock.
That proportion jumps to  about 11 percent in the next epoch of Vesta's history, about 3.5 billion to 4.1  billion years ago. This occurred when asteroids began "resonating"  with each other and the planets in their orbits, sending some objects careening  into the solar system and crashing into Vesta. While these encounters were more  rare, they took place at a much higher speed.
A typical asteroid collision  on Vesta today occurs at just 3 miles (5 km) a second, which is not fast enough  to produce rock melting. On the moon, by contrast, a collision is nearly four  times as fast: 11 miles (18 km) a second — that's about 39,600 mph (63,730  km/h). This is because Vesta is orbiting in a swarm of rocks moving at similar  speeds, while the moon is on its own and closer to the sun's gravity,  researchers said.
A new interpretation of  radiometric dating of Vesta's ancient asteroids, however, revealed small bodies  smashing into the surface twice as quickly — at velocities exceeding 6 miles  (10 km) a second. Craters from these smaller meteorites on Vesta's surface  vanished long ago due to gradual erosion from newer impacts.
Because argon is lost during  impacts if the "target is heated for a long enough time beyond a threshold  temperature," the paper stated, there's enough argon loss on ancient Vesta  meteorites to show that they were moving much faster 4 billion years ago than  previously believed.
Even later in asteroid's  development, about 1 billion to 2 billion years ago, two nearly cataclysmic  collisions changed the nature of the Vesta's interior. Scientists, who  performed that research separately from Marchi and his colleagues, said this  could explain why the asteroid has a thicker crust than could be explained  previously.
A suite of NASA scientists  were involved in the new research, including some from the Marshall Space  Flight Center and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. The agency-funded Lunar and  Planetary Institute also participated, along with institutions in California,  Tennessee, Arizona, Italy and Germany.
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