Ultraviolet Spectroscopy of Asteroid (4) Vesta
Jian-Yang Li, Dennis Bodewits, Lori M. Feaga, Wayne Landsman, Michael, F. A'Hearn, Max J. Mutchler, Christopher T. Russell, Lucy A. McFadden, Carol, A. Raymond

TL;DR
This study provides a detailed UV-visible spectral analysis of asteroid Vesta, combining new and archival data to understand its surface properties, spectral variability, and implications for space weathering.
Contribution
It offers the first comprehensive UV-visible spectral and rotational lightcurve analysis of Vesta, revealing no evidence of global space weathering or UV/visible reversal.
Findings
Vesta's geometric albedo varies from 0.09 at 250 nm to 0.38 at 673 nm.
The spectral slope shows a sharp minimum near 20° sub-Earth longitude.
No difference found between UV and visible/near-infrared lightcurve phasing.
Abstract
We report a comprehensive review of the UV-visible spectrum and rotational lightcurve of Vesta combining new observations by Hubble Space Telescope and Swift Gamma-ray Burst Observatory with archival International Ultraviolet Explorer observations. The geometric albedos of Vesta from 220 nm to 953 nm are derived by carefully comparing these observations from various instruments at different times and observing geometries. Vesta has a rotationally averaged geometric albedo of 0.09 at 250 nm, 0.14 at 300 nm, 0.26 at 373 nm, 0.38 at 673 nm, and 0.30 at 950 nm. The linear spectral slope as measured between 240 and 320 nm in the ultraviolet displays a sharp minimum near a sub-Earth longitude of 20^{\circ}, and maximum in the eastern hemisphere. This is consistent with the longitudinal distribution of the spectral slope in the visible wavelength. The photometric uncertainty in the ultraviolet…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
