Reflection, emission, and polarization properties of surfaces made of hyperfine grains, and implications for the nature of primitive small bodies
Robin Sultana, Olivier Poch, Pierre Beck, Bernard Schmitt, Eric, Quirico, Stefano Spadaccia, Lucas Patty, Antoine Pommerol, Alessandro, Maturilli, J\"orn Helbert, Giulia Alemanno

TL;DR
This study investigates how hyperfine grain mixtures of minerals influence the spectral and polarimetric properties of primitive small bodies, revealing nonlinear effects and the dominance of opaque components even at low concentrations.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the optical properties of small body surfaces are strongly affected by hyperfine grain mixtures and their proportions, providing insights into their composition and light scattering behavior.
Findings
Opaque components dominate spectral properties at low concentrations.
Spectral slopes vary with silicate proportion, resembling asteroid types.
Dark mixtures show olivine absorption features in MIR.
Abstract
There are various indications that the most primitive small bodies (P, D-type asteroids, comets) have surfaces made of intimate mixtures of opaque minerals and other components (silicates, carbonaceous compounds, etc.) in the form of sub-micrometre-sized grains, smaller than the wavelength at which they are observed, so-called hyperfine grains. Here, we investigate how the Vis-NIR-MIR spectral and V-band polarimetric properties of surfaces made of hyperfine grains are influenced by the relative abundance of such hyperfine materials, having strongly different optical indexes. Mixtures of grains of olivine and iron sulfide (or anthracite), as analogues of silicates and opaque minerals present on small bodies, were prepared at different proportions. The measurements reveal that these mixtures of hyperfine grains have spectral and polarimetric Vis-NIR properties varying in strongly…
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