Comparison of optical spectra between asteroids Ryugu and Bennu: II. High-precision analysis for space weathering trends
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, Le\'on, 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 compares the space weathering effects on the spectra of asteroids Ryugu and Bennu, revealing their initial spectral similarity and opposite evolution trends, which enhances understanding of C-complex asteroid surface processes.
Contribution
It provides high-precision analysis of space weathering trends on Ryugu and Bennu, demonstrating their initial spectral similarity and divergent evolution paths.
Findings
Bennu is brighter and bluer than Ryugu at 550 nm.
Spectral slopes are more uniform on Bennu at larger scales.
Fresh crater spectra on both asteroids are indistinguishable.
Abstract
The influence of space weathering on the observed spectra of C-complex asteroids remains uncertain. This has long hindered our understanding of their composition through telescope observations. Multi-band imaging of Ryugu by ONC-T on Hayabusa2 and that of Bennu by MapCam on OSIRIS-REx found opposite spectral trends of space weathering; Ryugu darkened/reddened while Bennu brightened/blued. How the spectra of Ryugu and Bennu evolved relative to each other would place a constraint for understanding their origins and evolutions. In this study, we compared the space weathering trends on Ryugu and Bennu by applying the results of cross calibration between ONC-T and MapCam. We show that the average Bennu surface is brighter by 18.0 1.5% at 550 nm and bluer by 0.18 0.03 m (480-850 nm slope) than Ryugu. The spectral slopes of surface materials are more uniform on Bennu…
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