# Closing the gap between Earth-based and interplanetary mission   observations: Vesta seen by VLT/SPHERE

**Authors:** R. JL. F\'etick, L. Jorda, P. Vernazza, M. Marsset, A. Drouard, T., Fusco, B. Carry, F. Marchis, J. Hanu\v{s}, M. Viikinkoski, M. Birlan, P., Bartczak, J. Berthier, J. Castillo-Rogez, F. Cipriani, F. Colas, G., Dudzi\'nski, C. Dumas, M. Ferrais, E. Jehin, M. Kaasalainen, A. Kryszczynska,, P. Lamy, H. Le Coroller, A. Marciniak, T. Michalowski, P. Michel, L.M., Mugnier, B. Neichel, M. Pajuelo, E. Podlewska-Gaca, T. Santana-Ros, P. Tanga,, F. Vachier, A. Vigan, O. Witasse, B. Yang

arXiv: 1902.01287 · 2019-02-27

## TL;DR

This study demonstrates that ground-based VLT/SPHERE observations can effectively retrieve detailed topographic and albedo features of asteroid Vesta, achieving resolutions comparable to space missions, and sets expectations for future larger telescopes.

## Contribution

It provides the first quantitative assessment of ground-based adaptive optics imaging accuracy for asteroid surface features, benchmarking against the Dawn mission data.

## Key findings

- Ground-based imaging retrieves features down to 20-30 km resolution.
- Deconvolution with a parametric PSF achieves an accuracy of about 1 pixel.
- Future 30-40m telescopes could resolve all main surface features of Vesta.

## Abstract

Context. Over the past decades, several interplanetary missions have studied small bodies in situ, leading to major advances in our understanding of their geological and geophysical properties. These missions, however, have had a limited number of targets. Among them, the NASA Dawn mission has characterised in detail the topography and albedo variegation across the surface of asteroid (4) Vesta down to a spatial resolution of approximately 20 m/pixel scale.   Aims. Here our aim was to determine how much topographic and albedo information can be retrieved from the ground with VLT/SPHERE in the case of Vesta, having a former space mission (Dawn) providing us with the ground truth that can be used as a benchmark.   Methods. We observed Vesta with VLT/SPHERE/ZIMPOL as part of our ESO large programme (ID 199.C-0074) at six different epochs, and deconvolved the collected images with a parametric point spread function (PSF). We then compared our images with synthetic views of Vesta generated from the 3D shape model of the Dawn mission, on which we projected Vesta's albedo information.   Results. We show that the deconvolution of the VLT/SPHERE images with a parametric PSF allows the retrieval of the main topographic and albedo features present across the surface of Vesta down to a spatial resolution of approximately 20-30 km. Contour extraction shows an accuracy of approximately 1 pixel (3.6 mas). The present study provides the very first quantitative estimate of the accuracy of ground-based adaptive-optics imaging observations of asteroid surfaces.   Conclusions. In the case of Vesta, the upcoming generation of 30-40m telescopes (ELT, TMT, GMT) should in principle be able to resolve all of the main features present across its surface, including the troughs and the north-south crater dichotomy, provided that they operate at the diffraction limit.

## Full text

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## Figures

14 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1902.01287/full.md

## References

35 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1902.01287/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1902.01287