A Spectroscopic Comparison of HED Meteorites and V-type Asteroids in the Inner Main Belt
Nicholas Moskovitz, Mark Willman, Thomas Burbine, Richard Binzel,, Schelte Bus

TL;DR
This study compares the near-infrared spectra of V-type asteroids and HED meteorites to explore their genetic relationship, revealing spectral similarities and differences that suggest a common origin from Vesta with possible multiple collisional events.
Contribution
It provides a detailed spectroscopic comparison between V-type asteroids and HED meteorites, highlighting spectral correlations and potential effects of space weathering and composition.
Findings
Strong correlation in band centers between asteroids and meteorites
Asteroids show larger band area ratios than meteorites
Low-inclination V-type asteroids may result from multiple collisions
Abstract
V-type asteroids in the inner Main Belt (a < 2.5 AU) and the HED meteorites are thought to be genetically related to one another as collisional fragments from the surface of the large basaltic asteroid 4 Vesta. We investigate this relationship by comparing the near-infrared (0.7-2.5 micron) spectra of 39 V-type asteroids to laboratory spectra of HED meteorites. The central wavelengths and areas spanned by the 1 and 2 micron pyroxene-olivine absorption bands that are characteristic of planetary basalts are measured for both the asteroidal and meteoritic data. The band centers are shown to be well correlated, however the ratio of areas spanned by the 1 and 2 micron absorption bands are much larger for the asteroids than for the meteorites. We argue that this offset in band area ratio is consistent with our currently limited understanding of the effects of space weathering, however we can…
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