The remarkable surface homogeneity of the Dawn mission target (1) Ceres
Benoit Carry, Pierre Vernazza, Christophe Dumas, William J. Merline,, Olivier Mousis, Philippe Rousselot, Emmanuel Jehin, Jean Manfroid, Marcello, Fulchignoni, Jean-Marc Zucconi

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution spectral imaging to demonstrate that Ceres' surface is remarkably homogeneous, with minimal spectral variation, providing insights into its compositional uniformity.
Contribution
The paper presents the first disk-resolved spectral observations of Ceres, revealing a highly uniform surface at a spatial resolution of approximately 75 km.
Findings
No spectral variation above 3% detected across Ceres' surface.
Detected slight spectral slope variations (~2%) correlated with albedo features.
Surface appears compositionally homogeneous at the observed spatial resolution.
Abstract
Dwarf-planet (1) Ceres is one of the two targets, along with (4) Vesta, that will be studied by the NASA Dawn spacecraft via imaging, visible and near-infrared spectroscopy, and gamma-ray and neutron spectroscopy. While Ceres' visible and near-infrared disk-integrated spectra have been well characterized, little has been done about quantifying spectral variations over the surface. Any spectral variation would give us insights on the geographical variation of the composition and/or the surface age. The only work so far was that of Rivkin & Volquardsen (2010, Icarus 206, 327) who reported rotationally-resolved spectroscopic (disk-integrated) observations in the 2.2-4.0 {\mu}m range; their observations showed evidence for a relatively uniform surface. Here, we report disk-resolved observations of Ceres with SINFONI (ESO VLT) in the 1.17-1.32 {\mu}m and 1.45-2.35 {\mu}m wavelength ranges.…
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