Back to Search Start Over

Nature, formation, and distribution of carbonates on Ceres

Authors :
Nathaniel Stein
Carol A. Raymond
Ernesto Palomba
Andrea Longobardo
Andrea Raponi
Filippo Giacomo Carrozzo
Maria Teresa Capria
Eleonora Ammannito
Michelangelo Formisano
Federico Tosi
Julie Castillo-Rogez
Marco Giardino
Maria Cristina De Sanctis
Sergio Fonte
Gianfranco Magni
Francesca Zambon
Alessandro Frigeri
Mauro Ciarniello
Bethany L. Ehlmann
Simone Marchi
Christopher T. Russell
Fabrizio Capaccioni
Source :
Science advances, vol 4, iss 3, Science Advances
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2018.

Abstract

Hydrated carbonates indicate that the surface of Ceres is recent and dehydration is ongoing, implying a still-evolving body.<br />Different carbonates have been detected on Ceres, and their abundance and spatial distribution have been mapped using a visible and infrared mapping spectrometer (VIR), the Dawn imaging spectrometer. Carbonates are abundant and ubiquitous across the surface, but variations in the strength and position of infrared spectral absorptions indicate variations in the composition and amount of these minerals. Mg-Ca carbonates are detected all over the surface, but localized areas show Na carbonates, such as natrite (Na2CO3) and hydrated Na carbonates (for example, Na2CO3·H2O). Their geological settings and accessory NH4-bearing phases suggest the upwelling, excavation, and exposure of salts formed from Na-CO3-NH4-Cl brine solutions at multiple locations across the planet. The presence of the hydrated carbonates indicates that their formation/exposure on Ceres’ surface is geologically recent and dehydration to the anhydrous form (Na2CO3) is ongoing, implying a still-evolving body.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science advances, vol 4, iss 3, Science Advances
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9e8cad5ad15ae76929cef8fc8c0fba5f