Meteorites look different from Near-Earth Asteroids
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An international team of scientists including astronomers from the European Space Agency (ESTEC, Netherlands), MIT (Cambridge, USA) and the Paris Observatory (LESIA) has discovered that meteorites differ in composition from near-Earth asteroids.
They explored the mineralogical composition of near-Earth asteroids (NEAs) and their most closely intersecting subset (potentially hazardous asteroids, PHAs) via visible and near-infrared spectroscopy. A priori these km-sized asteroids should have similar compositional distributions to meteorites delivered by more frequent (and less dangerous) smaller impacts. Surprisingly, they do not. Nearly 2/3 of the km-sized Earth-crossing asteroids match a single meteorite class (LL chondrites) that comprises only 8% of all falls. The rather specific spectral signature of NEA's allows them to trace their origin to a specific source at the inner edge of the asteroid belt (Flora family). The much broader compositional distribution of smaller meter-sized bodies (sampled as meteorites) implies a broader range of source regions (likely throughout the asteroid belt). One possible explanation is the role of a size dependent process, such as the Yarkovsky effect, in transporting material from the main belt.
Ordinary chondrites (OCs) are the most common class of meteorites, accounting for ~80% of all recovered falls. While numerous factors (e.g. meteoroid size and strength prior to atmospheric impact) can bias the statistics for recovering samples, the most commonly falling meteorites should reasonably correspond to the most commonly observed asteroids in the vicinity of Earth. Their asteroidal analogs are the so-called S- and Q-type asteroids.
These asteroids were observed in the near infrared by means of IRTF/SpeX as part of a regularly scheduled program of near-Earth object characterization conducted jointly between the IRTF, University of Hawaii, and MIT. These NIR spectroscopic measurements (0.8-2.5 µm) complemented already acquired visible spectra recorded during a survey of ~2000 asteroids (SMASS). Using a radiative transfer model, the team performed a detailed mineralogical comparison of these telescopically measured asteroid spectra with analogous wavelength laboratory measurements of ordinary chondrite meteorites (Fig 1).
It appears that meteorites (OCs) and NEAs (S and Q-types) do not have the same compositional distribution. In particular, S and Q-types NEAs best match LL chondrites but these are a minority among all OCs (10%). The immediate implication is that the NEAs sampled telescopically (in the size range having radii between 300m to 10km) are not the immediate parent bodies of smaller objects that fall to Earth as meteorites (i.e. preatmospheric meteorite parent bodies having radii on the order of meters). Instead, both populations are directly delivered from the main-belt (MB) to the near-Earth space but must have different source regions within the MB.
Interestingly, a mineralogical compatibility is established between most NEAs and the Flora family members (this family lies in the inner belt and accounts for 15-20% of all inner main belt asteroids); this family had been predicted (by dynamical simulations) to be the source for a substantial fraction of km-sized NEAs. While theory and observations agree on this latter point, it was also expected that most meteorites should originate from this inner region and the new results imply that this can not be.
Further dynamical modelling should help solving this paradox. For now, it is suggested that the Yarkovsky effect (Fig. 2) could well be the cause for this surprising result.
Reference
Compositional differences between meteorites and near-Earth asteroids,
Nature 454, 2008. P. Vernazza, R P. Binzel, C. A. Thomas, F. E. DeMeo, S. J. Bus, A.S. Rivkin, A. T. TokunagaContact
Pierre Vernazza (Docteur de l'Observatoire de Paris en postdoc à l'ESA, pierre.vernazza@esa.int)
Francesca Demeo (Observatoire de Paris, LESIA)
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