Date:
Tue, 24/01/201712:30-13:30
Location:
Kaplun building, Room No. 200
Lecturer: Dr. David Polishook
Affiliation: Department of Earth, Atmospheric
and Planetary Sciences,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
Abstract:
Seven out of nine Mars Trojan asteroids
belong to an orbital grouping and likely a
single progenitor (Christou 2014, Cuk et al.
2015). Here we report new near-infrared
observations of two of them (311999 and
385250) and we find that both present an
identical olivine-rich reflectance spectrum,
that is similar to the reflectance spectrum of
5261 Eureka, the largest of these seven
Trojans (Rivkin et al. 2007). These
measurements confirm the shared progenitor
of the seven and reinforce the observation
that all Mars Trojans are consistent with
achondritic material (Rivkin et al., 2003,
2007). Moreover, olivine-rich reflectance
spectra are rare amongst asteroids (DeMeo &
Carry, 2014, DeMeo et al. 2016), but olivine-
rich material is visible in numerous locations
on Mars (e.g. Hoefen et al. 2003, Ehlmann &
Edwards 2014) and consistent with some
martian meteorites (e.g. Chassigny,
ALHA77005; McSween 1985). Using numerical
simulations, we further show that the Mars
Trojans are an order of magnitude more likely
to be impact ejecta from Mars' plutonic rock
at the end of the epoch of planet formation
than captured stony achondrite asteroids in
the Mars orbit crossing population. For the
first time, specific asteroids are directly
identified as debris from terrestrial planets.
Additional details of the upcoming Astrophysics'
seminars can be found on the following link.
האירוע הזה כולל שיחת וידאו ב-Google Hangouts.
הצטרף: https://plus.google.com/hangouts/_/mail.huji.ac.il/astrophysics?hceid=bWFpbC5odWppLmFjLmlsX2c0czhydDlpcmhwZzRvdGNybWIzZGFqcjdvQGdyb3VwLmNhbGVuZGFyLmdvb2dsZS5jb20.jraro9692627467lt52pb2epj0&hs=121