Source regions of carbonaceous meteorites and NEOs
M. Bro\v{z}, P. Vernazza, M. Marsset, R.P. Binzel, F. DeMeo, M., Birlan, F. Colas, S. Anghel, S. Bouley, C. Blanpain, J. Gattacceca, S., Jeanne, L. Jorda, J. Lecubin, A. Malgoyre, A. Steinhausser, J. Vaubaillon, B., Zanda

TL;DR
This study identifies the primary source regions of various carbonaceous meteorites and near-Earth objects by analyzing asteroid families, collisional models, and observational data, revealing links between meteorites and specific asteroid sources.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive mapping of source regions for carbonaceous meteorites and NEOs, integrating spectroscopic, dynamical, and collisional models to identify specific asteroid family contributions.
Findings
Veritas, Polana, and Eos families are primary sources of certain chondrites.
Polana and Euphrosyne families are main sources of CI-like NEOs.
The flux of carbonaceous chondrites at metre sizes is comparable to that of ordinary chondrites.
Abstract
The present work aims to determine the source regions of carbonaceous chondrites (CM, CI, CO, CV, CK, CR, CH, CB, or C-ungrouped). We studied 38 individual asteroid families, including young and old ones, and determined their contributions to the NEO populations at metre and kilometre sizes using collisional and orbital models. Our models are in agreement with spectroscopic observations of NEOs, cosmic-ray exposure ages of meteorites, statistics of bolides, infrared emission from dust bands, composition of interplanetary dust particles (IDPs), or abundance of extraterrestrial helium-3. We identified the Veritas, Polana and Eos families as the primary sources of CM/CR, CI and CO/CV/CK chondrites, respectively. Substantial contributions are also expected from CM-like K\"onig and CI-like Clarissa, Misa and Hoffmeister families. The source regions of kilometre-sized bodies are generally…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Planetary Science and Exploration
