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Space weathering on airless bodies

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-PLANETS
Volume 121, Issue 10, Pages 1865-1884

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2016JE005128

Keywords

space weathering; Moon; asteroids

Funding

  1. NASA SSERVI [NNA14AB01A]
  2. NASA [NNA14AB01A, 685097] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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Space weathering refers to alteration that occurs in the space environment with time. Lunar samples, and to some extent meteorites, have provided a benchmark for understanding the processes and products of space weathering. Lunar soils are derived principally from local materials but have accumulated a range of optically active opaque particles (OAOpq) that include nanophase metallic iron on/in rims formed on individual grains (imparting a red slope to visible and near-infrared reflectance) and larger iron particles (which darken across all wavelengths) such as are often found within the interior of recycled grains. Space weathering of other anhydrous silicate bodies, such as Mercury and some asteroids, produces different forms and relative abundance of OAOpq particles depending on the particular environment. If the development of OAOpq particles is minimized (such as at Vesta), contamination by exogenic material and regolith mixing become the dominant space weathering processes. Volatile-rich bodies and those composed of abundant hydrous minerals (dwarf planet Ceres, many dark asteroids, and outer solar system satellites) are affected by space weathering processes differently than the silicate bodies of the inner solar system. However, the space weathering products of these bodies are currently poorly understood and the physics and chemistry of space weathering processes in different environments are areas of active research.

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