Compositional Constraints for Lucy Mission Trojan Asteroids via Near-Infrared Spectroscopy
Benjamin N. L. Sharkey, Vishnu Reddy, Juan A. Sanchez, Matthew R. M., Izawa, Joshua P. Emery

TL;DR
This study provides near-infrared spectra for six Lucy mission target asteroids, revealing diverse surface compositions and spectral slopes, and models their possible surface materials to understand their origins and histories.
Contribution
It offers the first detailed spectral analysis of Lucy mission targets, identifying compositional differences and modeling surface materials to infer their formation and evolution.
Findings
Spectral slopes range from red to less red, indicating diverse compositions.
Patroclus and Eurybates likely have hydrated surfaces with water ice.
Orus and Leucus require organics or iron-rich silicates to explain their spectra.
Abstract
We report near-infrared (0.7-2.5 micron) reflectance spectra for each of the six target asteroids of the forthcoming NASA Discovery-class mission Lucy. Five Jupiter Trojans (the binary (617) Patroclus system, (3548) Eurybates, (21900) Orus, (11351) Leucus, and (15094) Polymele) are well-characterized, with measurable spectral differences. We also report a survey-quality spectrum for main belt asteroid (52246) Donaldjohanson. We measured a continuum of spectral slopes including "red" (Orus, Leucus), "less red" (Eurybates, Patroclus-Menoetius) and intermediate (Polymele), indicating a range of compositional end-members or geological histories. We perform radiative transfer modeling of several possible surface compositions. We find that the mild-sloped spectra and low albedo of Patroclus and Eurybates imply similar compositions. Eurybates (~7 wt.% water ice) and Patroclus (~4 wt.% water…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
