Composition, Mineralogy, and Porosity of Multiple Asteroid Systems from Visible and Near-infrared Spectral Data
Sean S. Lindsay, Franck Marchis, Joshua P. Emery, J. Emilio Enriquez,, Marcelo Assafin

TL;DR
This study characterizes the composition, mineralogy, and porosity of 42 main belt multiple asteroid systems using visible and near-infrared spectral data, providing insights into their formation and meteorite analogs.
Contribution
It introduces a new spectral analysis routine (SARA) and applies it to determine mineralogy and meteorite analogs, linking spectral data to asteroid formation hypotheses.
Findings
Most MASs have LL-like mineralogies, especially those linked to the Flora family.
Estimated macroporosities support existing formation hypotheses.
The SARA routine effectively determines spectral band parameters for asteroid mineralogy.
Abstract
We provide a taxonomic and compositional characterization of Multiple Asteroid Systems (MASs) located in the main belt (MB) using visible and near-infrared (0.45-2.5 um) spectral data of 42 MB MASs. The mineralogical analysis is applied to determine meteorite analogs for the MASs, which, in turn, are applied to the MAS density measurements of Marchis et al. (2012) to estimate the system porosity. The macroporosities are used to evaluate the primary MAS formation hypotheses. The visible observing campaign includes 25 MASs obtained using the SOAR telescope with the Goodman High Throughput Spectrometer. The infrared observing campaign includes 34 MASs obtained using the NASA IRTF with the SpeX spectragraph. The MASs are classified using the Bus-DeMeo taxonomic system. We perform a NIR spectral band parameter analysis using a new analysis routine, the Spectral Analysis Routine for Asteroids…
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