Japan Geoscience Union Meeting 2025

Presentation information

[E] Poster

P (Space and Planetary Sciences ) » P-PS Planetary Sciences

[P-PS03] Small Solar System Bodies: New perspectives on the origin and evolution of the Solar System

Fri. May 30, 2025 5:15 PM - 7:15 PM Poster Hall (Exhibition Hall 7&8, Makuhari Messe)

convener:Sota Arakawa(Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology), Tatsuaki Okada(Institute of Space and Astronautical Science, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency), Fumi Yoshida(University of Occupational and Environmental Health, Japan), Ryota Fukai(Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency)


5:15 PM - 7:15 PM

[PPS03-P09] Candidates for main-belt asteroids with surface inhomogeneity

*Sunao Hasegawa1, Michaël Marsset2,3, Francesca E. DeMeo3, Josef Hanuš4, Richard P. Binzel3, Schelte J. Bus5, Brian Burt6,3, David Polishook7, Cristina A. Thomas8, Jooyeon Geem9, Masateru Ishiguro10, Daisuke Kuroda11, Pierre Vernazza12 (1.Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, 2.European Southern Observatory, 3.Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 4.Charles University, 5.Institute for Astronomy, University of Hawaii, 6.Lowell Observatory, 7.Weizmann Institute of Science, 8.Northern Arizona University, 9.Luleå University of Technology, 10.Seoul National University, 11.Japan Spaceguard Association, Bisei Spaceguard Center, 12.Laboratoire d’Astrophysique de Marseille)

Keywords:asteroid

Terrestrial differentiated objects in the Solar System, such as the Mercury, Earth, Mars, and the Moon, have geologically complex surfaces with compositional inhomogeneities. Previous studies using spacecraft and telescopes have shown that asteroids larger than 100 km in diameter also exhibit surface inhomogeneities at global scales, while smaller objects have not yet to show such features. Here, Hasegawa et al. 2024, AJ 167, 224 investigate inhomogeneous surface candidates in a sample of 130 main-belt asteroids using multi-epoch spectroscopic data from the MIT–Hawaii Near-Earth Object Spectroscopic Survey (Binzel et al. 2019, Icarus 324, 41), which has been observing asteroids using a self-consistent observing technique for about 20 years. 12 reliable candidates with spectra more than 3σ apart from each other at 2.4 micron and 52 optimistic candidates for surface inhomogeneities are detected. Eight objects with surface inhomogeneities have been reported as candidates. The study suggests that the size limit between small homogeneous bodies and larger inhomogeneous objects, if it exists at all, is less than 100 km in diameter. A-type objects have a higher rate of inhomogeneous candidates than other spectral type bodies. This may be because olivine, which is the surface principal component of A-type asteroids, has a more efficient response to space weathering than does pyroxene, so that a similar range of surface ages translates into a wider range of visible to near-infrared spectral slopes in the case of A-type bodies.