Near-Infrared Spectroscopy of Trojan Asteroids: Evidence for Two Compositional Groups
Joshua P. Emery, Devon M. Burr, and Dale P. Cruikshank

TL;DR
This study analyzed near-infrared spectra of Trojan asteroids, revealing two distinct compositional groups with different origins, which enhances understanding of Solar System formation and the asteroids' surface properties.
Contribution
The paper provides the first extensive NIR spectral analysis of 58 Trojans, identifying two compositional groups and suggesting their different origins, which was not previously established.
Findings
No confirmed absorption features detected.
Spectral slope bimodality indicates two compositional groups.
Both groups are equally present in leading and trailing swarms.
Abstract
The Trojan asteroids remain quite poorly understood, yet their physical properties provide unique perspective on chemical and dynamical processes that shaped the Solar System. The current study was undertaken to investigate surface compositions of these objects. We present 66 new near-infrared (NIR; 0.7 to 2.5 microns) spectra of 58 Trojans, including members of both the leading and trailing swarms. We also include in the analysis previously published NIR spectra of 13 Trojans (3 of which overlap with the new sample). This data set permits not only a direct search for compositional signatures, but also a search for patterns that may reveal clues to the origin of the Trojans. We do not report any confirmed absorption features in the new spectra. Analysis of the spectral slopes, however, reveals an interesting bimodality among the NIR data. The two spectral groups identified appear to be…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Planetary Science and Exploration · Isotope Analysis in Ecology
