Infrared Spectra of Pyroxenes (Crystalline Chain Silicates) at Room Temperature
J. E. Bowey, A. M. Hofmeister, E. Keppel

TL;DR
This study provides detailed room-temperature infrared spectra of various pyroxenes, revealing spectral trends related to composition and structure, which aids in identifying these minerals in astronomical environments and understanding their mineralogy.
Contribution
The paper offers the first comprehensive quantitative spectra of 17 Mg-Fe-Ca pyroxenes at room temperature, highlighting spectral features useful for astronomical mineral identification.
Findings
Pyroxene spectra vary with composition and structure.
Key spectral bands shift with Mg, Fe, and Ca content.
Some astronomical features may indicate pyroxenes with higher Fe content.
Abstract
Pyroxene crystals are common in meteorites but few compositions have been recognized in astronomical environments. We present quantitative room-temperature spectra of 17 Mg-- Fe-- and Ca--bearing ortho- and clinopyroxenes, and a Ca-pyroxenoid in order to discern trends indicative of crystal structure and a wide range of composition. Data are produced using a Diamond Anvil Cell: our band strengths are up to 6 times higher than those measured in KBr or polyethylene dispersions, which include variations in path length (from grain size) and surface reflections that are not addressed in data processing. Pyroxenes have varied spectra: only two bands, at 10.22~m and 15.34~m in enstatite (En), are common to all. Peak-wavelengths generally increase as Mg is replaced by Ca or Fe. However, two bands in MgFe-pyroxenes shift to shorter wavelengths as the Fe component increases from…
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