Low delta-V near-Earth asteroids: A survey of suitable targets for space missions
S. Ieva, E. Dotto, D. Perna, M. A. Barucci, F. Bernardi, S. Fornasier,, F. De Luise, E. Perozzi, A. Rossi, J. R. Brucato

TL;DR
This paper surveys 13 near-Earth objects with low delta-V for space missions, providing spectral classification and mineralogical analysis to identify suitable targets for exploration and resource utilization.
Contribution
It presents new spectral data and classifications for 13 NEOs with low delta-V, expanding knowledge of their surface composition and potential as mission targets.
Findings
Most objects belong to the S-complex taxonomy.
Two objects are classified as C-complex.
Mineralogy indicates similarity to ordinary chondrites.
Abstract
In the last decades Near-Earth Objects (NEOs) have become very important targets to study, since they can give us clues to the formation, evolution and composition of the Solar System. In addition, they may represent either a threat to humankind, or a repository of extraterrestrial resources for suitable space-borne missions. Within this framework, the choice of next-generation mission targets and the characterisation of a potential threat to our planet deserve special attention. To date, only a small part of the 11,000 discovered NEOs have been physically characterised. From ground and space-based observations one can determine some basic physical properties of these objects using visible and infrared spectroscopy. We present data for 13 objects observed with different telescopes around the world (NASA-IRTF, ESO-NTT, TNG) in the 0.4 - 2.5 um spectral range, within the NEOSURFACE survey…
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