Delivery of Dark Material to Vesta via Carbonaceous Chondritic Impacts
Vishnu Reddy, Lucille Le Corre, David P. O'Brien, Andreas Nathues,, Edward A. Cloutis, Daniel D. Durda, William F. Bottke, Megha U. Bhatt, David, Nesvorny, Debra Buczkowski, Jennifer E. C. Scully, Elizabeth M. Palmer,, Holger Sierks, Paul J. Mann, Kris J. Becker, Andrew W. Beck

TL;DR
NASA's Dawn spacecraft data indicates that dark material on Vesta's surface likely originated from carbonaceous chondritic impacts, providing insights into primitive body contributions to the early Solar System's volatile inventory.
Contribution
This study links Vesta's dark material to carbonaceous chondrite impacts, suggesting exogenic origin and impact delivery during basin formation, with no evidence of volcanic activity.
Findings
Dark material spectra match carbonaceous chondrites
Impact modeling supports low-velocity delivery during basin formation
No evidence of volcanic origin for dark material
Abstract
NASA's Dawn spacecraft observations of asteroid (4) Vesta reveal a surface with the highest albedo and color variation of any asteroid we have observed so far. Terrains rich in low albedo dark material (DM) have been identified using Dawn Framing Camera (FC) 0.75 {\mu}m filter images in several geologic settings: associated with impact craters (in the ejecta blanket material and/or on the crater walls and rims); as flow-like deposits or rays commonly associated with topographic highs; and as dark spots (likely secondary impacts) nearby impact craters. This DM could be a relic of ancient volcanic activity or exogenic in origin. We report that the majority of the spectra of DM are similar to carbonaceous chondrite meteorites mixed with materials indigenous to Vesta. Using high-resolution seven color images we compared DM color properties (albedo, band depth) with laboratory measurements…
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