Basalt or not? Near-infrared spectra, surface mineralogical estimates, and meteorite analogs for 33 Vp-type asteroids
Paul S. Hardersen, Vishnu Reddy, Edward Cloutis, Matt Nowinski,, Margaret Dievendorf, Russell M. Genet, Savan Becker, Rachel Roberts

TL;DR
This study uses near-infrared spectroscopy to identify and analyze basaltic asteroids in the main belt, revealing their distribution, mineralogy, and possible origins, especially highlighting differences between inner and outer belt populations.
Contribution
It provides new spectral and mineralogical data for 33 Vp-type asteroids, expanding knowledge of basaltic asteroid distribution and origins in the main belt.
Findings
95% of inner-belt Vp asteroids are basaltic, likely from 4 Vesta.
Outer-belt Vp asteroids show diverse origins and compositions.
Two new likely outer-belt basaltic asteroids were identified.
Abstract
Investigations of the main asteroid belt and efforts to constrain that population's physical characteristics involve the daunting task of studying hundreds of thousands of small bodies. Taxonomic systems are routinely employed to study the large scale nature of the asteroid belt because they utilize common observational parameters, but asteroid taxonomies only define broadly observable properties and are not compositionally diagnostic (Tholen, 1984; Carvano et al., 2010, Hasselmann et al., 2012). This work builds upon the results of Hardersen et al. (2014, 2015), which has the goal of constraining the abundance and distribution of basaltic asteroids throughout the main asteroid belt. We report on the near infrared (NIR: 0.7 to 2.5 microns) reflectance spectra, surface mineralogical characterizations, spectral band parameter analysis, and meteorite analogs for 33 Vp asteroids. NIR…
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