Photometric survey of 67 near-Earth objects
S. Ieva, E. Dotto, E. Mazzotta Epifani, D. Perna, A. Rossi, M. A., Barucci, A. Di Paola, R. Speziali, M. Micheli, E. Perozzi, M. Lazzarin, and, I. Bertini

TL;DR
This study conducted visible photometry on 67 near-Earth objects to classify their taxonomy, revealing a predominance of S-complex and highlighting the importance of carbonaceous NEOs for impact mitigation.
Contribution
First-time taxonomic classification of 67 NEOs using visible photometry, enhancing understanding of their composition and potential impact mitigation challenges.
Findings
Majority of NEOs are S-complex types
Carbonaceous NEOs are less common in small populations
Some NEOs have challenging orbits for mitigation
Abstract
The near-Earth object (NEO) population is a window into the original conditions of the protosolar nebula, and has the potential to provide a key pathway for the delivery of water and organics to the early Earth. In addition to delivering the crucial ingredients for life, NEOs can pose a serious hazard to humanity since they can impact the Earth. To properly quantify the impact risk, physical properties of the NEO population need to be studied. Unfortunately, NEOs have a great variation in terms of mitigation-relevant quantities (size, albedo, composition, etc.) and less than 15% of them have been characterized to date. There is an urgent need to undertake a comprehensive characterization of smaller NEOs (D<300m) given that there are many more of them than larger objects. One of the main aims of the NEOShield-2 project (2015--2017), financed by the European Community in the framework of…
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