Comparison of optical spectra between asteroids Ryugu and Bennu:I. Cross calibration between Hayabusa2/ONC-T and OSIRIS-REx/MapCam
K. Yumoto, E. Tatsumi, T. Kouyama, D. R. Golish, Y. Cho, T. Morota, S., Kameda, H. Sato, B. Rizk, D. N. DellaGiustina, Y. Yokota, H. Suzuki, J. de, Leon, H. Campins, J. Licandro, M. Popescu, J. L. Rizos, R. Honda, M. Yamada,, N. Sakatani, C. Honda, M. Matsuoka, M. Hayakawa

TL;DR
This study cross-calibrated optical spectra from Hayabusa2 and OSIRIS-REx instruments to enable accurate comparison of asteroid spectra, revealing that calibration differences significantly impact spectral analysis and that proper calibration improves consistency with ground observations.
Contribution
The paper introduces a method for cross-calibrating optical spectra from different asteroid observation instruments using lunar data as a standard, reducing systematic errors.
Findings
Cross calibration factors for Bennu's reflectance at multiple bands were determined.
Calibration reduces systematic errors, enabling <2% accuracy in spectral comparison.
Geometric albedo of Bennu aligns with ground-based observations after calibration.
Abstract
Asteroids (162173) Ryugu and (101955) Bennu observed by Hayabusa2 and OSIRIS-REx share many properties, but spectral observations by the telescopic Optical Navigation Camera (ONC-T) and MapCam detected subtle but significant differences, which may reflect differences in their origin and evolution. Comparing these differences on the same absolute scale is necessary for understanding their causes. However, ONC-T and MapCam have a large imager-to-imager systematic error of up to 15% caused by the difference in radiometric calibration targets. To resolve this problem, we cross calibrated albedo and color data between the two instruments using the Moon as the common calibration standard. The images of the Moon taken by ONC-T and MapCam were compared with those simulated using photometry models developed from lunar orbiter data. Our results show that the cross-calibrated reflectance of Ryugu…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Planetary Science and Exploration · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
