New polarimetric and spectroscopic evidence of anomalous enrichment in spinel-bearing Calcium-Aluminium-rich Inclusions among L-type asteroids
M. Devog\`ele, P. Tanga, A. Cellino, Ph. Bendjoya, J.-P. Rivet, J., Surdej, D. Vernet, J. M. Sunshine, S. J. Bus, L. Abe, S. Bagnulo, G. Borisov,, H. Campins, B. Carry, J. Licandro, W. McLean, N. Pinilla-Alonso

TL;DR
This study presents polarimetric and spectroscopic evidence linking the unique properties of L-class asteroids, especially Barbarians, to their anomalous mineral composition rich in Calcium-Aluminum-rich Inclusions, revealing new insights into their surface properties.
Contribution
It provides the first extensive polarimetric and spectroscopic analysis of L-class Barbarians, establishing a correlation between inversion angle and CAI abundance in asteroids.
Findings
Inversion angles range between 25 and 30 degrees among studied Barbarians.
Spectral data show variations in slope and near-infrared absorption features.
Polarimetric inversion angle correlates with CAI presence, indicating composition-driven properties.
Abstract
Asteroids can be classified into several groups based on their spectral reflectance. Among these groups, the one belonging to the L-class in the taxonomic classification based on visible and near-infrared spectra exhibit several peculiar properties. First, their near-infrared spectrum is characterized by a strong absorption band interpreted as the diagnostic of a high content of the FeO bearing spinel mineral. This mineral is one of the main constituents of Calcium-Aluminum-rich Inclusions (CAI) the oldest mineral compounds found in the solar system. In polarimetry, they possess an uncommonly large value of the inversion angle incompatible with all known asteroid belonging to other taxonomical classes. Asteroids found to possess such a high inversion angle are commonly called Barbarians based on the first asteroid on which this property was first identified, (234)~Barbara. In this paper…
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