TY - JOUR
T1 - Illuminating the dark side of the asteroid population
T2 - Visible near-infrared (0.7–2.45 μm) surface mineralogy modeling of D-type asteroids using Shkuratov theory
AU - Gartrelle, Gordon M.
AU - Hardersen, Paul S.
AU - Izawa, Matthew R.M.
AU - Nowinski, Matthew C.
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors would like to thank Brian Burt and Szilard Galay for developing and providing the code nuclei on which our model code is based. We express our deep gratitude to Francesca DeMeo and Joshua Emery who generously provided their IRTF D-type spectra and invaluable guidance to improve our understanding of D-types and Jovian Trojans. We would also like to thank Paul Abell, Wayne Barkhouse, and Michael Gaffey for their insightfully honest critical feedback. We greatly appreciate the technical input and editorial support of Ron Fevig, Tomoki Nakamura, and Ted Roush. Special thanks to Maria Antonella Barucci, Rick Binzel, Deborah Domingue, and Faith Vilas for their inspiration and mentoring. We are also immensely grateful to James Casler, at the University of North Dakota, for his creative leadership, sincere support, and executive oversight. Finally, we thank our anonymous peer reviewers for their constructive comments and candor. This research utilizes spectra acquired by the authors with data obtained from the NASA RELAB facility at Brown University. Details of the RELAB facility are available at the RELAB web site (http://www.planetary.brown.edu/relab/). This research utilizes spectra acquired by the authors with data obtained from the Planetary Spectrophotometer Facility at the University of Winnipeg (https://psf.uwinnipeg.ca/FACILITIES/). We thank the teams of these two outstanding facilities for their support and encouragement. This study was performed using joint-user facilities of the Institute of Planetary Materials, Okayama University. We express deep appreciation and thanks to the Institute for their gracious support and cooperation. Finally, we are immensely grateful to the entire team at NASA/IRTF for their help, and are especially thankful for the contribution of the people of Hawaii who offered use of their sacred land from which we observed the heavens.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Elsevier Inc.
PY - 2021/1/15
Y1 - 2021/1/15
N2 - D-type asteroids are a prime example of the many dark, low-albedo asteroids which do not reflect sufficient light to reveal detectable mineral absorptions. While D-type asteroids are relatively rare in the inner solar system and the main asteroid belt, they are dominant among the Jovian Trojans. In this study, we have applied Shkuratov radiative transfer modeling to laboratory spectra of meteorites for which mineral abundances have been measured using X-ray diffraction (XRD) and Rietveld refinement. The general agreement of radiative transfer and XRD estimates of mineral abundances demonstrates the applicability of the radiative transfer approach to featureless, low-albedo spectra. Shkuratov modeling was then applied to new spectral observations of D-type asteroids, along with numerous previously published spectra. The surface mineral abundances of 81 D-type objects, including NASA's Lucy Mission target (21900) Orus, were modeled using assemblages that are plausible based on meteorite analogues. Modeling results reveal D-types are composed of: low-iron olivine; magnesium saponite-dominant phyllosilicates; opaques such as pyrrhotite and tholin; as well as traces of water-ice and other constituents. Subtle compositional differences in model mineralogies exist between Trojan and non-Trojan D-types as well as between L4 and L5 Trojans suggesting differing formational as well as evolutional conditions have affected these bodies.
AB - D-type asteroids are a prime example of the many dark, low-albedo asteroids which do not reflect sufficient light to reveal detectable mineral absorptions. While D-type asteroids are relatively rare in the inner solar system and the main asteroid belt, they are dominant among the Jovian Trojans. In this study, we have applied Shkuratov radiative transfer modeling to laboratory spectra of meteorites for which mineral abundances have been measured using X-ray diffraction (XRD) and Rietveld refinement. The general agreement of radiative transfer and XRD estimates of mineral abundances demonstrates the applicability of the radiative transfer approach to featureless, low-albedo spectra. Shkuratov modeling was then applied to new spectral observations of D-type asteroids, along with numerous previously published spectra. The surface mineral abundances of 81 D-type objects, including NASA's Lucy Mission target (21900) Orus, were modeled using assemblages that are plausible based on meteorite analogues. Modeling results reveal D-types are composed of: low-iron olivine; magnesium saponite-dominant phyllosilicates; opaques such as pyrrhotite and tholin; as well as traces of water-ice and other constituents. Subtle compositional differences in model mineralogies exist between Trojan and non-Trojan D-types as well as between L4 and L5 Trojans suggesting differing formational as well as evolutional conditions have affected these bodies.
KW - Asteroids
KW - D-type
KW - Jupiter Trojans
KW - Lucy Mission
KW - Radiative transfer modeling
KW - Shkuratov theory
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U2 - 10.1016/j.icarus.2020.114043
DO - 10.1016/j.icarus.2020.114043
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85092497092
SN - 0019-1035
VL - 354
JO - Icarus
JF - Icarus
M1 - 114043
ER -