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Constraining the Regolith Composition of Asteroid (16) Psyche via Laboratory Near-infrared Spectroscopy

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arxiv 2105.12712 v1 pith:M7RXP7HP submitted 2021-05-26 astro-ph.EP

Constraining the Regolith Composition of Asteroid (16) Psyche via Laboratory Near-infrared Spectroscopy

classification astro-ph.EP
keywords psycheasteroidcarbonaceousmateriallaboratorylow-femetalpyroxene
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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(16) Psyche is the largest M-type asteroid in the main belt and the target of the NASA Discovery-class Psyche mission. Despite gaining considerable interest in the scientific community, Psyche's composition and formation remain unconstrained. Originally, Psyche was considered to be almost entirely composed of metal due to its high radar albedo and spectral similarities to iron meteorites. More recent telescopic observations suggest the additional presence of low-Fe pyroxene and exogenic carbonaceous chondrites on the asteroid's surface. To better understand the abundances of these additional materials, we investigated visible near-infrared (0.35 - 2.5 micron) spectral properties of three-component laboratory mixtures of metal, low-Fe pyroxene, and carbonaceous chondrite. We compared the band depths and spectral slopes of these mixtures to the telescopic spectrum of (16) Psyche to constrain material abundances. We find that the best matching mixture to Psyche consists of 82.5% metal, 7% low-Fe pyroxene, and 10.5% carbonaceous by weight, suggesting that the asteroid is less metallic than originally estimated (~94%). The relatively high abundance of carbonaceous chondrite material estimated from our laboratory experiments implies the delivery of this exogenic material through low velocity collisions to Psyche's surface. Assuming that Psyche's surface is representative of its bulk material content, our results suggest a porosity of 35% to match recent density estimates.

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