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Photometric behavior of Ryugu’s NIR spectral parameters

Authors :
Longobardo, Andrea
Palomba, E.
Galiano, Anna
Dirri, Fabrizio
Zinzi, Angelo
D'Amore, Mario
Domingue, Deborah L.
Kitazato, K.
Yokota, Y.
Schroeder, Stephan
Iwata, T.
Matsuoka, M.
Hiroi, T.
Takir, D.
Nakamura, T.
Abe, M.
Ohtake, M.
Matsuura, S.
Watanabe, S
Yoshikawa, M.
Saiki, T.
Okada, T.
Tanaka, S.
Yamamoto, Y.
Takei, Y.
Shirai, K.
Hirata, N.
Matsumoto, K.
Tsuda, T.
Source :
Astronomy & Astrophysics. 666:A185
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
EDP Sciences, 2022.

Abstract

Context. JAXA’s Hayabusa2 mission rendezvoused the Ryugu asteroid for 1.5 years to clarify the carbonaceous asteroids’ record for Solar System origin and evolution. Aims. We studied the photometric behavior of the spectral parameters characterizing the near-infrared (NIR) spectra of Ryugu provided by the Hayabusa2/NIRS3 instrument, that is to say 1.9 µm reflectance, 2.7 and 2.8 µm band depths (ascribed to phyllosilicates), and NIR slope. Methods. For each parameter, we applied the following empirical approach: (1) retrieval of the equigonal albedo by applying the Akimov disk function (this step was only performed for the reflectance photometric correction); (2) retrieval of the median spectral parameter value at each phase angle bin; and (3) retrieval of the phase function by a linear fit. Results. Ryugu’s phase function shows a steepness similar to Ceres, according to the same taxonomy of the two asteroids. Band depths decrease with increasing phase angle: this trend is opposite to that observed on other asteroids explored by space missions and is ascribed to the very dark albedo. NIR and visible phase reddening are similar, contrary to other asteroids, where visible phase reddening is larger: this could be due to surface darkness or to particle smoothness. Albedo and band depths are globally uncorrelated, but locally anticorrelated. A correlation between darkening and reddening is observed.

Details

ISSN :
14320746 and 00046361
Volume :
666
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Astronomy & Astrophysics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....625864391fc89d18bfc92c8e5b406869