Grooves and
crater chains appear to radiate from Stickney. One hypothesis suggests that they were formed as a result of stresses from the impact that created the crater; if true, this suggests that the impact nearly destroyed Phobos itself. There are however numerous other hypotheses as to how they were made, such as that they were formed by material ejected from impacts on Mars, that they were created by
tidal forces exerted by Mars, or even that they were created by boulders rolling along Phobos's surface following the Stickney impact. Regardless of the causes of these grooves, the impact of the object which created Stickney was large enough to have potentially destroyed Phobos; a 2016 study by Syal et al. found that the high
porosity of the moon was critical in preventing it from being destroyed during the collision. It is possible that the area underneath Stickney is much denser and less porous than the rest of Phobos, though models of the moon's interior vary on this. Stickney has a noticeable lineated texture on its interior walls, caused by landslides from materials falling into the crater. There is a noticeable blue spectral coloration on the south-western edge of the crater, which is theorized to be a relatively thin layer of rock. ==See also==