Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Tatsuhiro Michikami is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Tatsuhiro Michikami.


Science | 2007

Regolith migration and sorting on asteroid Itokawa.

Hideaki Miyamoto; Hajime Yano; Daniel J. Scheeres; Shinsuke Abe; O. S. Barnouin-Jha; Andrew F. Cheng; Hirohide Demura; Robert W. Gaskell; Naru Hirata; Masateru Ishiguro; Tatsuhiro Michikami; Akiko M. Nakamura; Ryosuke Nakamura; J. Saito; Sho Sasaki

High-resolution images of the surface of asteroid Itokawa from the Hayabusa mission reveal it to be covered with unconsolidated millimeter-sized and larger gravels. Locations and morphologic characteristics of this gravel indicate that Itokawa has experienced considerable vibrations, which have triggered global-scale granular processes in its dry, vacuum, microgravity environment. These processes likely include granular convection, landslide-like granular migrations, and particle sorting, resulting in the segregation of the fine gravels into areas of potential lows. Granular processes become major resurfacing processes because of Itokawas small size, implying that they can occur on other small asteroids should those have regolith.


Science | 2006

Detailed images of asteroid 25143 Itokawa from Hayabusa.

J. Saito; Hideaki Miyamoto; Ryosuke Nakamura; Masateru Ishiguro; Tatsuhiro Michikami; Akiko M. Nakamura; Hirohide Demura; Sho Sasaki; Naru Hirata; C. Honda; Aya Yamamoto; Yusuke Yokota; Tetsuharu Fuse; Fumi Yoshida; David J. Tholen; Robert W. Gaskell; Tatsuaki Hashimoto; Takashi Kubota; Y. Higuchi; Tsuko Nakamura; Peter W. H. Smith; Kensuke Hiraoka; T. Honda; Shingo Kobayashi; Masato Furuya; N. Matsumoto; E. Nemoto; A. Yukishita; K. Kitazato; Budi Dermawan

Rendezvous of the Japanese spacecraft Hayabusa with the near-Earth asteroid 25143 Itokawa took place during the interval September through November 2005. The onboard camera imaged the solid surface of this tiny asteroid (535 meters by 294 meters by 209 meters) with a spatial resolution of 70 centimeters per pixel, revealing diverse surface morphologies. Unlike previously explored asteroids, the surface of Itokawa reveals both rough and smooth terrains. Craters generally show unclear morphologies. Numerous boulders on Itokawas surface suggest a rubble-pile structure.


Science | 2011

Three-Dimensional Structure of Hayabusa Samples: Origin and Evolution of Itokawa Regolith

Akira Tsuchiyama; Masayuki Uesugi; Takashi Matsushima; Tatsuhiro Michikami; Toshihiko Kadono; Tomoki Nakamura; Kentaro Uesugi; Tsukasa Nakano; Scott A. Sandford; Ryo Noguchi; T. Matsumoto; Junya Matsuno; Takashi Nagano; Y. Imai; Akihisa Takeuchi; Yoshio Suzuki; Toshihiro Ogami; Jun Katagiri; Mitsuru Ebihara; Trevor R. Ireland; Fumio Kitajima; Keisuke Nagao; Hiroshi Naraoka; Takaaki Noguchi; Ryuji Okazaki; Hisayoshi Yurimoto; Michael E. Zolensky; T. Mukai; Masanao Abe; Toru Yada

Laboratory analysis of samples returned from an asteroid establishes a direct link between asteroids and meteorites and provides clues to the complex history of the asteroid and its surface. Regolith particles on the asteroid Itokawa were recovered by the Hayabusa mission. Their three-dimensional (3D) structure and other properties, revealed by x-ray microtomography, provide information on regolith formation. Modal abundances of minerals, bulk density (3.4 grams per cubic centimeter), and the 3D textures indicate that the particles represent a mixture of equilibrated and less-equilibrated LL chondrite materials. Evidence for melting was not seen on any of the particles. Some particles have rounded edges. Overall, the particles’ size and shape are different from those seen in particles from the lunar regolith. These features suggest that meteoroid impacts on the asteroid surface primarily form much of the regolith particle, and that seismic-induced grain motion in the smooth terrain abrades them over time.


Earth, Planets and Space | 2008

Size-frequency statistics of boulders on global surface of asteroid 25143 Itokawa

Tatsuhiro Michikami; Akiko M. Nakamura; Naru Hirata; Robert W. Gaskell; Ryosuke Nakamura; T. Honda; Chikatoshi Honda; Kensuke Hiraoka; J. Saito; Hirohide Demura; Masateru Ishiguro; Hideaki Miyamoto

The surface of asteroid 25143 Itokawa is covered with numerous boulders although gravity is very small compared with that of other asteroids previously observed from spacecraft. Here we report the size-frequency statistics of boulders on the entire surface of Itokawa based on high-resolution images (1 pixel ≈0.4 m) obtained by the Hayabusa spacecraft. There are 373 boulders larger than 5 m in mean horizontal dimension on the entire surface—0.393 km2—and the number density is nearly 103/km2. The cumulative boulder size distribution on the entire surface has a power-index of −3.1 ± 0.1. For the east and west sides and the head and body portions of Itokawa, the power-index of the size distributions and the number densities of boulders of these areas are thought to be similar from the statistical point of view. A global mapping of boulders shows that there is no apparent correlation in the locations of boulders and craters. The ratio of the total volume of the boulders to the total excavated volume of the craters on Itokawa is ≈25% when only craters larger than 50 m in mean diameter are considered, and this ratio is extremely larger than that on Eros and the Moon, respectively. The origin of boulders on the surface of Itokawa was examined quantitatively by calculating the number of boulders and the size of the largest boulder using a model based on impact cratering experiments. The result indicated that the boulders on the surface of Itokawa cannot solely be the product of craters. Our results suggest that the boulders originated from the disruption of the larger parent body of Itokawa, as has been described in previous papers (Fujiwata et al., Science, 312, 1330–1334, 2006; Saito et al., Science, 312, 1341–1344, 2006).


Earth, Planets and Space | 2008

Impact process of boulders on the surface of asteroid 25143 Itokawa— fragments from collisional disruption

Akiko M. Nakamura; Tatsuhiro Michikami; Naru Hirata; Akira Fujiwara; Ryosuke Nakamura; Masateru Ishiguro; Hideaki Miyamoto; Hirohide Demura; Kensuke Hiraoka; T. Honda; Chikatoshi Honda; J. Saito; Tatsuaki Hashimoto; Takashi Kubota

The subkilometer-size asteroid 25143 Itokawa is considered to have a gravitationally bounded rubble-pile structure. Boulders appearing in high-resolution images retrieved by the Hayabusa mission revealed the genuine outcome of the collisional event involving the asteroid’s parent body. Here we report that the boulders’ shapes and structures are strikingly similar to laboratory rock impact fragments despite differences of orders of magnitude in scale and complexities of the physical processes. These similarities suggest the universal character of the process throughout the range of these scales, and the brittle and structurally continuous nature regarding the parent body of the boulders. The similarity was likely preserved because of relatively lesser comminuting processes acting on individual boulders; the close assemblages of similar appearing boulders (a boulder family) represent the impact destruction of boulders on the surface.


The Astronomical Journal | 2017

Anisotropic Ejection from Active Asteroid P/2010 A2: An Implication of Impact Shattering on an Asteroid*

Yoon-Young Kim; Masateru Ishiguro; Tatsuhiro Michikami; Akiko M. Nakamura

We revisited a mass ejection phenomenon that occurred in asteroid P/2010 A2 in terms of the dynamical properties of the dust particles and large fragments. We constructed a model assuming anisotropic ejection within a solid cone-shaped jet and succeeded in reproducing the time-variant features in archival observational images over ~3 years from 2010 January to 2012 October. We assumed that the dust particles and fragments were ejected in the same direction from a point where no object had been detected in any observations, and the anisotropic model explains all of the observations including (i) the unique dust cloud morphology, (ii) the trail surface brightness, and (iii) the motions of the fragments. Our results suggest that the original body was shattered by an impact with specific energy J kg−1, and remnants of slow antipodal ejecta (i.e., anisotropic ejection in our model) were observed as P/2010 A2. The observed quantities are consistent with those obtained through laboratory impact experiments, supporting the idea that the P/2010 A2 event is the first evidence of the impact shattering that occurred in the present main asteroid belt.


Icarus | 2009

A survey of possible impact structures on 25143 Itokawa

Naru Hirata; O. S. Barnouin-Jha; Chikatoshi Honda; Ryosuke Nakamura; Hideaki Miyamoto; Sho Sasaki; Hirohide Demura; Akiko M. Nakamura; Tatsuhiro Michikami; Robert W. Gaskell; J. Saito


Planetary and Space Science | 2004

Ejecta size-velocity relation derived from the distribution of the secondary craters of kilometer-sized craters on Mars

Yoshiaki Hirase; Akiko M. Nakamura; Tatsuhiro Michikami


Icarus | 2016

Fragment shapes in impact experiments ranging from cratering to catastrophic disruption

Tatsuhiro Michikami; A. Hagermann; Tokiyuki Kadokawa; Akifumi Yoshida; Akira Shimada; Sunao Hasegawa; Akira Tsuchiyama


Archive | 2006

Observations of 25143 Itokawa by the Asteroid Multiband Imaging Camera (AMICA) of Hayabusa: Morphology of Brighter and Darker Areas

Sho Sasaki; J. Saito; Masato Ishiguro; Naru Hirata; Hiroyuki Miyamoto; Hirohide Demura; Takashi Hashimoto; Yusuke Higuchi; Kensuke Hiraoka; Chikatoshi Honda; Tetsuya Honda; Kohei Kitazato; Toru Kubota; Tatsuhiro Michikami; Akiko M. Nakamura; R. Nakamura; Toru M. Nakamura; Peter W. H. Smith; J. Terazono; David J. Tholen; Akira Yamamoto; Yusuke Yokota; Hidehisa Akiyama; Budi Dermawan; Tetsuharu Fuse; C. Shinohara; Akito Sogame; Fumi Yoshida

Collaboration


Dive into the Tatsuhiro Michikami's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Robert W. Gaskell

Planetary Science Institute

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge