Widespread carbon-bearing materials on near-Earth asteroid (101955) Bennu

(101955) Bennu is a dark, Earth orbit-crossing, asteroid thought to be assembled from the fragments of an ancient collision. Spatially-resolved visible and near-infrared spectra of Bennu provide details about its surface properties and composition. In addition to a hydrated phyllosilicate band, we d...

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Veröffentlicht in:Science (American Association for the Advancement of Science) 2020-11, Vol.370 (6517)
Hauptverfasser: Simon, Amy A., Kaplan, Hannah H., Hamilton, Victoria E., Lauretta, Dante S., Campins, Humberto, Barucci, M. Antonietta, DellaGiustina, Daniella N., Reuter, Dennis C., Sandford, Scott A., Lim, Lucy F., Rozitis, Benjamin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:(101955) Bennu is a dark, Earth orbit-crossing, asteroid thought to be assembled from the fragments of an ancient collision. Spatially-resolved visible and near-infrared spectra of Bennu provide details about its surface properties and composition. In addition to a hydrated phyllosilicate band, we detect a ubiquitous 3.4-micron absorption feature, which we attribute to a mix of organic and carbonate materials. The shape and depth of this absorption feature vary across Bennu’s surface, spanning the range seen among similar main-belt asteroids. Its distribution does not correlate with the temperature, reflectance, spectral slope, or hydrated minerals although those characteristics correlate with each other in some cases. The deepest 3.4-micron absorptions occur on individual boulders. The variations may be due to differences in abundance, recent exposure, or space weathering.
ISSN:0036-8075
1095-9203
DOI:10.1126/science.abc3522