Author:
Takir Driss,Emery Joshua P.,Bottke William F.,Arredondo Anicia
Abstract
AbstractThe asteroid (142) Polana is classified as a B-type asteroid located in the inner Main Belt. This asteroid is the parent of the New Polana family, which has been proposed to be the likely source of primitive near-Earth asteroids such as the B-type asteroid (101955) Bennu. To investigate the compositional correlation between Polana and Bennu at the 3 µm band and their aqueous alteration histories, we analyzed the spectra of Polana in the ~ 2.0–4.0 µm spectral range using the NASA Infrared Telescope Facility in Hawai’i. Our findings indicate that Polana does not exhibit discernable 3 µm hydrated mineral absorption (within 2σ), which is in contrast to asteroid Bennu. Bennu displayed a significant 3 µm absorption feature similar to CM- and CI-type carbonaceous chondrites. This suggests two possibilities: either Bennu did not originate from the New Polana family parented by asteroid Polana or the interior of Bennu’s parent body was not homogenous, with diverse levels of aqueous alteration. Several explanations support the latter possibility, including heating due to shock waves and pressure, which could have caused the current dehydrated state of Bennu’s parent body.
Funder
NASA’s Solar System Observations
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference56 articles.
1. Binzel, R. P., Reddy, V. & Dunn, T. L. The Near-Earth Object Population: Connections to Comets, Main-Belt Asteroids, and Meteorites. In Asteroids IV (eds Michel, P. et al.) 243–256 (University of Arizona Press, 2015).
2. Bottke, W. F. et al. In search of the source of asteroid (101955) Bennu: Applications of the stochastic YORP model. Icarus 247, 191–217 (2015).
3. Bottke, W. F. et al. Debiased orbital and absolute magnitude distribution of near-earth objects. Icarus 156, 399–433 (2002).
4. Dykhuis, M. & Greenberg, R. Collisional family structure within the Nysa-Polanacomplex. Icarus 252, 199–211 (2015).
5. Nesvorný, D., Deienno, R., Bottke, W. F., Jedicke, R. & Naidu, S. NEOMOD: A new orbital distribution model for near-earth objects. Astron. J. 166(2) (2023).