摘要: Phobos is the target of the return sample mission Martian Moons eXploration
by JAXA that will analyze in great details the physical and compositional
properties of the satellite from orbit, from the surface and in terrestrial
laboratories, giving clues about its formation. Some models propose that Phobos
and Deimos were formed after a giant impact giving rise to an extended debris
disk. Assuming that Phobos formed from a cascade of disruptions and
re-accretions of several parent bodies in this disk, and that they are all
characterized by a low material cohesion, Hesselbrock & Milton (2017) have
showed that a recycling process may happen during the assembling of Phobos, by
which Phobos' parents are destroyed into a Roche-interior ring and reaccreted
several times. In the current paper we explore in details the recycling model,
and pay particular attention to the characteristics of the disk using 1D models
of disk/satellite interactions. In agreement with previous studies we confirm
that, if Phobos' parents bodies are gravitational aggregates (rubble piles),
then the recycling process does occur. However, Phobos should be accompanied
today by a Roche-interior ring. Furthermore, the characteristics of the ring
are not reconcilable with today`s observations of Mars' environment, which put
stringent constraints on the existence of a ring around Mars. The recycling
mechanism may or may not have occurred at the Roche limit for an old moon
population, depending on their internal cohesion. However, the Phobos we see
today cannot be the outcome of such a recycling process.