Mineralogical Characterization of Baptistina Asteroid Family: Implications for K/T Impactor Source
Vishnu Reddy, Jorge M. Carvano, Daniela Lazzaro, Tatiana A., Michtchenko, Michael J. Gaffey, Michael S. Kelley, Thais Moth\'e Diniz,, Alvaro Alvarez Candal, Nicholas A. Moskovitz, Edward A. Cloutis, Erin L. Ryan

TL;DR
This study refines the mineralogical understanding of the Baptistina Asteroid Family, showing it is composed mainly of LL-type ordinary chondrites, which challenges previous links to the K/T impactor source.
Contribution
It provides detailed mineralogical analysis of BAF asteroids, clarifying their composition and refuting earlier hypotheses about their connection to the K/T impactor.
Findings
Baptistina is similar to LL-type ordinary chondrites.
Asteroids near BAF show diverse mineralogical types.
BAF's composition likely unrelated to the K/T impactor source.
Abstract
Bottke et al. (2007) linked the catastrophic formation of Baptistina Asteroid Family (BAF) to the K/T impact event. This linkage was based on dynamical and compositional evidence, which suggested the impactor had a composition similar to CM2 carbonaceous chondrites. However, our recent study (Reddy et al. 2009) suggests that the composition of (298) Baptistina is similar to LL-type ordinary chondrites rather than CM2 carbonaceous chondrites. This rules out any possibility of it being related to the source of the K/T impactor, if the impactor was of CM-type composition. Mineralogical study of asteroids in the vicinity of BAF has revealed a plethora of compositional types suggesting a complex formation and evolution environment. A detailed compositional analysis of 16 asteroids suggests several distinct surface assemblages including ordinary chondrites (Gaffey SIV subtype), primitive…
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