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Dark material on Vesta from the infall of carbonaceous volatile-rich material.

Authors :
McCord TB
Li JY
Combe JP
McSween HY
Jaumann R
Reddy V
Tosi F
Williams DA
Blewett DT
Turrini D
Palomba E
Pieters CM
De Sanctis MC
Ammannito E
Capria MT
Le Corre L
Longobardo A
Nathues A
Mittlefehldt DW
Schröder SE
Hiesinger H
Beck AW
Capaccioni F
Carsenty U
Keller HU
Denevi BW
Sunshine JM
Raymond CA
Russell CT
Source :
Nature [Nature] 2012 Nov 01; Vol. 491 (7422), pp. 83-6.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Localized dark and bright materials, often with extremely different albedos, were recently found on Vesta's surface. The range of albedos is among the largest observed on Solar System rocky bodies. These dark materials, often associated with craters, appear in ejecta and crater walls, and their pyroxene absorption strengths are correlated with material brightness. It was tentatively suggested that the dark material on Vesta could be either exogenic, from carbon-rich, low-velocity impactors, or endogenic, from freshly exposed mafic material or impact melt, created or exposed by impacts. Here we report Vesta spectra and images and use them to derive and interpret the properties of the 'pure' dark and bright materials. We argue that the dark material is mainly from infall of hydrated carbonaceous material (like that found in a major class of meteorites and some comet surfaces), whereas the bright material is the uncontaminated indigenous Vesta basaltic soil. Dark material from low-albedo impactors is diffused over time through the Vestan regolith by impact mixing, creating broader, diffuse darker regions and finally Vesta's background surface material. This is consistent with howardite-eucrite-diogenite meteorites coming from Vesta.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1476-4687
Volume :
491
Issue :
7422
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
23128228
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature11561