The Nature of M-Class Asteroids from 3-μm Observations
✍ Scribed by A.S. Rivkin; E.S. Howell; L.A. Lebofsky; B.E. Clark; D.T. Britt
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 290 KB
- Volume
- 145
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0019-1035
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
We have spectrophotometrically observed twenty M-class asteroids in the 1.2-to 3.5-µm region, sixteen of them for the first time. When we combined these with earlier surveys by Rivkin et al. (1995) and Jones et al. (1990) for a total of 27 asteroids, we find that over 35% of them have absorption features at 3 µm diagnostic of water of hydration. This absorption feature is inconsistent with these M-class asteroids being primarily Fe-Ni metal, which would be expected if they were remnant cores of disrupted differentiated objects. We also find that large (D > 65 km) M asteroids are very likely to be hydrated (75%), while small (D < 65 km) M asteroids are very unlikely to be hydrated (10%). We believe the interpretation most consistent with all data (astronomical, meteoritical, and geochemical modeling) holds the large M-class asteroids to be relatively primitive material perhaps akin to enstatite chondrites or salt-rich carbonaceous chondrites, with the iron meteorites found on Earth perhaps deriving from the smaller, anhydrous M asteroids. In keeping with Rivkin et al. (1995), we place the hydrated M asteroids in the separate W class.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
A report of the detection of the C-H hydrocarbon band complex at 3.4 µm in an asteroid spectrum, by D. P. Cruikshank and R. H. Brown (1987, Science 238, 183-184) is not confirmed by recent data of higher quality. Spectra of the same asteroid and six other low-albedo asteroids do not show this featur