Simulated Space Weathering of Fe- and Mg-rich Aqueously Altered Minerals Using Pulsed Laser Irradiation
H. M. Kaluna, H. A. Ishii, J. P. Bradley, J. J. Gillis-Davis, P. G., Lucey

TL;DR
This study simulates space weathering on aqueously altered minerals using pulsed laser irradiation, revealing how spectral properties evolve differently for Mg-rich and Fe-rich minerals, with implications for asteroid organic synthesis and aqueous history.
Contribution
It demonstrates how space weathering affects spectral features of aqueously altered minerals, highlighting compositional dependencies and potential organic synthesis on asteroid surfaces.
Findings
Fe-rich minerals darken and show spectral bluing with irradiation
Mg-rich minerals exhibit little reddening but reduced band depths
Micron-sized carbon particles containing nitrogen and oxygen form during irradiation
Abstract
The aim of this work is to investigate contrasting spectral trends observed in carbonaceous chondrites by simulating space weathering effects on a subset of minerals found in these meteorites. We use pulsed laser irradiation to simulate micrometeorite impacts on aqueously altered minerals and observe their spectral and physical evolution as a function of irradiation time. Irradiation of the mineral lizardite, a Mg-phyllosilicate, produces little reddening and darkening, but a pronounced reduction in band depths. Irradiation of an Fe-rich aqueously altered mineral assemblage composed of cronstedtite, pyrite and siderite, produces significant darkening and band depth suppression. The spectral slopes of the Fe-rich assemblage initially redden then become bluer with increasing irradiation time. Analyses of the Fe-rich assemblage using scanning and transmission electron microscopy reveal the…
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