High-Resolution Observations of Bright Boulders on Asteroid Ryugu: 2. Spectral Properties

Autor: Sugimoto, Chiho, Tatsumi, Eri, Cho, Yuichiro, Morota, Tomokatsu, Honda, Rie, Kameda, Shingo, Yokota, Yosuhiro, Yumoto, Koki, Aoki, Minami, DellaGiustina, Daniella N., Michikami, Tatsuhiro, Hiroi, Takahiro, Domingue, Deborah L., Michel, Patrick, Schröder, Stefan, Nakamura, Tomoki, Yamada, Manabu, Sakatani, Naoya, Kouyama, Toru, Honda, Chikatoshi, Hayakawa, Masahiko, Matsuoka, Moe, Suzuki, Hidehiko, Yoshioka, Kazuo, Ogawa, Kazunori, Sawada, Hirotaka, Arakawa, Masahiko, Saiki, Takanao, Imamura, Hiroshi, Takagi, Yasuhiko, Yano, Hajime, Shirai, Kei, Okamoto, Chisato, Tsuda, Yuichi, Nakazawa, Satoru, Iijima, Yuichi, Sugita, Seiji
Rok vydání: 2021
Předmět:
Druh dokumentu: Working Paper
DOI: 10.1016/j.icarus.2021.114591
Popis: Many small boulders with reflectance values higher than 1.5 times the average reflectance have been found on the near-Earth asteroid 162173 Ryugu. Based on their visible wavelength spectral differences, Tatsumi et al. (2021) defined two bright boulder classes: C-type and S-type. These two classifications of bright boulders have different size distributions and spectral trends. In this study, we measured the spectra of 79 bright boulders and investigated their detailed spectral properties. Analyses obtained a number of important results. First, S-type bright boulders on Ryugu have spectra that are similar to those found for two different ordinary chondrites with different initial spectra that have been experimentally space weathered the same way. This suggests that there may be two populations of S-type bright boulders on Ryugu, perhaps originating from two different impactors that hit its parent body. Second, the model space-weathering ages of meter-size S-type bright boulders, based on spectral change rates derived in previous experimentally irradiated ordinary chondrites, are 0.1-1 Myr, which is consistent with the crater retention age (Comment: 21 pages, 20 Figures, 1 Table, Published in Icarus, November 15 2021, 369 114591
Databáze: arXiv