1. Nature of the 'Orange' Material on Vesta From Dawn
- Author
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LeCorre, L, Reddy, V, Schmedemann, N, Becker, K. J, OBrien, D. P, Yamashita, N, Peplowski, P. N, Prettyman, T. H, Li, J.-Y, Coultis, E. A, Denevi, B. W, Kneissl, T, Palmer, E, Gaskell, R. W, Nathues, A, Gaffey, M. J, Mittlefeldt, D. W, Gary, W. B, Sierks, H, Russell, C. T, and Raymond, C. A
- Subjects
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
From ground-based observations of Vesta, it is well-known that the vestan surface has a large variation in albedo. Analysis of images acquired by the Hubble Space Telescope allowed production of the first color maps of Vesta and showed a diverse surface in terms of reflectance. Thanks to images collected by the Dawn spacecraft at Vesta, it became obvious that these specific units observed previously can be linked to geological features. The presence of the darkest material mostly around impact craters and scattered in the Western hemisphere has been associated with carbonaceous chondrite contamination [4]; whereas the brightest materials are believed to result from exposure of unaltered material from the subsurface of Vesta (in fresh looking impact crater rims and in Rheasilvia's ejecta and rim remants). Here we focus on a distinct material characterized by a steep slope in the near-IR relative to all other kinds of materials found on Vesta. It was first detected when combining Dawn Framing Camera (FC) color images in Clementine false-color composites [5] during the Approach phase of the mission (100000 to 5200 km from Vesta). We investigate the mineralogical and elemental composition of this material and its relationship with the HEDs (Howardite-Eucrite- Diogenite group of meteorites).
- Published
- 2014