Spectral investigation of Ceres analogue mixtures: in-depth analysis of crater central peak material (ccp) on Ceres
A. Galiano, F. Dirri, E. Palomba, A. Longobardo, B. Schmitt, P. Beck

TL;DR
This study investigates the spectral properties of Ceres crater central peak materials by creating and analyzing analogue mixtures, revealing how composition, grain size, and space weathering influence spectral slopes and surface aging.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed spectral analysis of Ceres analogues with varying compositions and grain sizes, linking spectral features to surface processes and weathering effects.
Findings
The most similar Ceres analogue mixture contains dolomite, graphite, antigorite, and NH4-montmorillonite.
Youngest crater materials show negative spectral slopes due to fine dark dispersions.
Space weathering processes can transform spectra from negative to positive slopes.
Abstract
In order to investigate the causes of different spectral slope in ccps, different grain-sizes of Ceres analogue mixtures were produced, heated to remove absorption of atmospheric water, and spectrally analyzed. First, the end-members which compose the Ceres surface (using the antigorite as Mg-phyllosilicate, the NH4-montmorillonite as NH4-phyllosilicate, the dolomite as carbonate and the graphite as dark component), were mixed, obtaining mixtures with different relative abundance, and identifying the mixture with the reflectance spectrum most similar to the average Ceres spectrum. The mixtures were obtained with grain size of 0-25 {\mu}m, 25-50 mic and 50-100 mic, were heated and spectrally analysed at T= 300 K and T=200 K (typical for surface Ceres temperature during VIR observations). The most similar Ceres analogue mixture is composed of dolomite (18%), graphite (27%), antigorite…
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