Spectral properties of near-Earth and Mars-crossing asteroids using Sloan photometry
Benoit Carry, Enrique Solano, Siegfried Eggl, and Francesca E. DeMeo

TL;DR
This study classifies a large sample of near-Earth and Mars-crossing asteroids using Sloan photometry, analyzes their source regions, and investigates how planetary encounters may refresh asteroid surfaces.
Contribution
It provides the largest taxonomic classification of NEAs and MCs from SDSS data and models planetary encounter effects on asteroid surface resurfacing.
Findings
Increased known classifications by 40% for NEAs and 663% for MCs.
Inner Main Belt is confirmed as a primary source of NEAs.
Q-type asteroids have more encounters with Venus and Earth than S-types.
Abstract
The nature and origin of the asteroids orbiting in near-Earth space, including those on a potentially hazardous trajectory, is of both scientific interest and practical importance. We aim here at determining the taxonomy of a large sample of near-Earth (NEA) and Mars-crosser (MC) asteroids and analyze the distribution of these classes with orbit. We use this distribution to identify their source regions and to study the strength of planetary encounters to refresh asteroid surfaces. We measure the photometry of these asteroids over four filters at visible wavelengths on images taken by the SDSS. These colors are used to classify the asteroids into a taxonomy consistent with the widely used Bus-DeMeo taxonomy based on spectroscopy. We report here on the taxonomic classification of 206 NEAs and 776 MCs determined from SDSS photometry, representing an increase of 40% and 663% of known…
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