
Distinguishing between Shock-darkening and Space-weathering Trends in Ordinary Chondrite Reflectance Spectra
Author(s) -
T. Kohout,
Antti Penttilä,
P. Mann,
E. A. Cloutis,
J. Čuda,
Jan Filip,
Ondřej Malina,
V. Reddy,
V. I. Grokhovsky,
G. A. Yakovlev,
Patricie Halodová,
J. Haloda
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
the planetary science journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2632-3338
DOI - 10.3847/psj/aba7c2
Subject(s) - space weathering , ordinary chondrite , regolith , weathering , chondrite , meteorite , silicate , asteroid , geology , spectral line , astrophysics , mineralogy , physics , astrobiology , astronomy , geochemistry
Space-weathering as well as shock effects can darken meteorite and asteroid reflectance spectra. We present a detailed comparative study on shock-darkening and space-weathering using different lithologies of the Chelyabinsk LL5 chondrite. Compared to space-weathering, the shock processes do not cause significant spectral slope changes and are more efficient in attenuating the orthopyroxene 2 μ m absorption band. This results in a distinct shock vector in the reflectance spectra principal component analysis, moving the shocked silicate-rich Chelyabinsk spectra from the S-complex space into the C/X complex. In contrast to this, the space-weathering vector stays within the S complex, moving from Q type to S type. Moreover, the 2 μ m to 1 μ m band depth ratio (BDR) as well as the 2 μ m to 1 μ m band area ratio (BAR) are not appreciably affected by shock-darkening or shock melting. Space-weathering, however, causes significant shifts in both BDR and BAR toward higher values. Application of the BDR method to the three distinct areas on the asteroid Itokawa reveals that Itokawa is rather uniformly space-weathered and not influenced by regolith roughness or relative albedo changes.