Aqueous alteration on main belt primitive asteroids: Results from visible spectroscopy

•This work focuses on the study of the aqueous alteration process which acted in the main belt.•We present new visible spectra of 80 main belt primitive asteroids.•Statistical analysis on a sample of 600 primitive main belt asteroids, including our and literature data.•The aqueous alteration process...

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Veröffentlicht in:Icarus (New York, N.Y. 1962) N.Y. 1962), 2014-05, Vol.233, p.163-178
Hauptverfasser: Fornasier, S., Lantz, C., Barucci, M.A., Lazzarin, M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•This work focuses on the study of the aqueous alteration process which acted in the main belt.•We present new visible spectra of 80 main belt primitive asteroids.•Statistical analysis on a sample of 600 primitive main belt asteroids, including our and literature data.•The aqueous alteration process dominates in primitive asteroids located between 2.3 and 3.1AU.•The percentage of hydrated asteroids is strongly correlated with their size – around 50% of the observed C.•Type asteroids show absorption feature in the visible range due to hydrated silicates. This work focuses on the study of the aqueous alteration process which acted in the main belt and produced hydrated minerals on the altered asteroids. Hydrated minerals have been found mainly on Mars surface, on main belt primitive asteroids and possibly also on few TNOs. These materials have been produced by hydration of pristine anhydrous silicates during the aqueous alteration process, that, to be active, needed the presence of liquid water under low temperature conditions (below 320K) to chemically alter the minerals. The aqueous alteration is particularly important for unraveling the processes occurring during the earliest times of the Solar System history, as it can give information both on the asteroids thermal evolution and on the localization of water sources in the asteroid belt. To investigate this process, we present reflected light spectral observations in the visible region (0.4–0.94μm) of 80 asteroids belonging to the primitive classes C (prevalently), G, F, B and P, following the Tholen (Tholen, D.J. [1984]. Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Arizona, Tucson). classification scheme. We find that about 65% of the C-type and all the G-type asteroids investigated reveal features suggesting the presence of hydrous materials, mainly a band centered around 0.7μm, while we do not find evidence of hydrated materials in the other low albedo asteroids (B, F, and P) investigated. We combine the present observations with the visible spectra of asteroids available in the literature for a total of 600 primitive main belt asteroids. We analyze all these spectra in a similar way to characterize the absorption band parameters (band center, depth and width) and spectral slope, and to look for possible correlations between the aqueous alteration process and the asteroids taxonomic classes, orbital elements, heliocentric distances, albedo and sizes. Our analysis shows that the aqueous alteration sequence starts
ISSN:0019-1035
1090-2643
DOI:10.1016/j.icarus.2014.01.040