Investigating the Relationship between (3200) Phaethon and (155140) 2005 UD through Telescopic and Laboratory Studies
Theodore Kareta, Vishnu Reddy, Neil Pearson, Juan A. Sanchez, Walter, M. Harris

TL;DR
This study investigates the relationship between near-Earth objects Phaethon and 2005 UD through telescopic spectral analysis and laboratory heating experiments, concluding they are likely unrelated despite similar properties.
Contribution
First near-infrared spectrum of 2005 UD and laboratory heating tests to explore their relationship with Phaethon, revealing they are probably coincidental rather than parent-fragment.
Findings
2005 UD's spectrum differs from Phaethon's, indicating no direct parent-fragment link.
Laboratory heating of meteoritic samples shows spectral differences consistent with the observed spectra.
The objects' similar properties are likely coincidental, not due to a shared origin.
Abstract
The relationship between the Near-Earth Objects (3200) Phaethon and (155140) 2005 UD is unclear. While both are parents to Meteor Showers, (the Geminids and Daytime Sextantids, respectively), have similar visible-wavelength reflectance spectra and orbits, dynamical investigations have failed to find any likely method to link the two objects in the recent past. Here we present the first near-infrared reflectance spectrum of 2005 UD, which shows it to be consistently linear and red-sloped unlike Phaethon's very blue and concave spectrum. Searching for a process that could alter some common starting material to both of these end states, we hypothesized that the two objects had been heated to different extents, motivated by their near-Sun orbits, the composition of Geminid meteoroids, and previous models of Phaethon's surface. We thus set about building a new laboratory apparatus to acquire…
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