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Featured researches published by Driss Takir.


The Astronomical Journal | 2016

DETECTION OF WATER AND/OR HYDROXYL ON ASTEROID (16) Psyche

Driss Takir; Vishnu Reddy; Juan A. Sanchez; Michael K. Shepard; Joshua Patrick Emery

NASA [NNH14CK55B]; Eugene M. Shoemaker Postdoctoral Fellowship (NASA Planetary Geology and Geophysics Program); NASA Planetary Geology and Geophysics grants [NNX14AN05G, NNX14AN35G]; NASA Solar System Observing grant [NNX16AE91G]


arXiv: Earth and Planetary Astrophysics | 2015

Astronomical observations of volatiles on asteroids

Andrew Scott Rivkin; Humberto Campins; Joshua Patrick Emery; Ellen Susanna Howell; J. Licandro; Driss Takir; Faith Vilas

We have long known that water and hydroxyl are important components in meteorites and asteroids. However, in the time since the publication of Asteroids III, evolution of astronomical instrumentation, laboratory capabilities, and theoretical models have led to great advances in our understanding of H2O/OH on small bodies, and spacecraft observations of the Moon and Vesta have important implications for our interpretations of the asteroidal population. We begin this chapter with the importance of water/OH in asteroids, after which we will discuss their spectral features throughout the visible and near-infrared. We continue with an overview of the findings in meteorites and asteroids, closing with a discussion of future opportunities, the results from which we can anticipate finding in Asteroids V. Because this topic is of broad importance to asteroids, we also point to relevant in-depth discussions elsewhere in this volume.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

Phase Angle Effects on 3 μm Absorption Band on Ceres: Implications for DAWN Mission

Driss Takir; Vishnu Reddy; Juan A. Sanchez; Lucille Le Corre; Paul S. Hardersen; A. Nathues

Phase angle-induced spectral effects are important to characterize since they affect spectral band parameters such as band depth and band center, and therefore skew mineralogical interpretations of planetary bodies via reflectance spectroscopy. Dwarf planet (1) Ceres is the next target of NASAs Dawn mission, which is expected to arrive in 2015 March. The visible and near-infrared mapping spectrometer (VIR) on board Dawn has the spatial and spectral range to characterize the surface between 0.25–5.0 μm. Ceres has an absorption feature at 3.0 μm due to hydroxyl- and/or water-bearing minerals. We analyzed phase angle-induced spectral effects on the 3 μm absorption band on Ceres using spectra measured with the long-wavelength cross-dispersed (LXD: 1.9–4.2 μm) mode of the SpeX spectrograph/imager at the NASA Infrared Telescope Facility. Ceres LXD spectra were measured at different phase angles ranging from 07 to 22°. We found that the band center slightly increases from 3.06 μm at lower phase angles (07 and 6°) to 3.07 μm at higher phase angles (11° and 22°), the band depth decreases by ~20% from lower phase angles to higher phase angles, and the band area decreases by ~25% from lower phase angles to higher phase angles. Our results will have implications for constraining the abundance of OH on the surface of Ceres from VIR spectral data, which will be acquired by Dawn starting spring 2015.


The Astronomical Journal | 2016

DETECTION OF ROTATIONAL SPECTRAL VARIATION ON THE M-TYPE ASTEROID (16) PSYCHE

Juan A. Sanchez; Vishnu Reddy; Michael K. Shepard; Cristina A. Thomas; Edward A. Cloutis; Driss Takir; Albert Rudolph Conrad; Cain Kiddell; Daniel M. Applin

NASA [NNX13AP27G, NNX12AG12G, NNX11AN84G]; IRTF TAC; National Aeronautics and Space Administration [NNX12AF24G, NNX13AQ46G]; Canada Foundation for Innovation; Manitoba Research Innovations Fund; Canadian Space Agency; Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada; University of Winnipeg


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2018

Ground-based characterization of Hayabusa2 mission target asteroid 162173 Ryugu: constraining mineralogical composition in preparation for spacecraft operations

Lucille Le Corre; Juan A. Sanchez; Vishnu Reddy; Driss Takir; Edward A. Cloutis; A. Thirouin; Kris J. Becker; Jian-Yang Li; Seiji Sugita; Eri Tatsumi

NASA Hayabusa2 Participating Scientist grant [NNX16AK77G]; NASA Near-Earth Object Observations Program [NNX14AL06G, NNX17AJ19G]; Canadian Space Agency; Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada; Canada Foundation for Innovation; Manitoba Research Innovation Fund; University of Winnipeg; NASA Hayabusa2 Participating Scientists grants [NNX17AL02G]; NASA [NNH14CK55B]


Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2016

Asteroids and the James Webb Space Telescope

Andrew Scott Rivkin; Franck Marchis; John Arthur Stansberry; Driss Takir; Cristina A. Thomas

The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) provides the opportunity for ground-breaking observations of asteroids. It covers wavelength regions that are unavailable from the ground, and does so with unprecedented sensitivity. The main-belt and Trojan asteroids are all observable at some point in the JWST lifetime. We present an overview of the capabilities for JWST and how they apply to the asteroids as well as some short science cases that take advantage of these capabilities.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

The Physical Characterization of the Potentially Hazardous Asteroid 2004 Bl86: A Fragment of a Differentiated Asteroid

Vishnu Reddy; Bruce L. Gary; Juan A. Sanchez; Driss Takir; Cristina A. Thomas; Paul S. Hardersen; Yenal Ogmen; Paul Benni; Thomas G. Kaye; Joao Gregorio; Joe Garlitz; David Polishook; Lucille Le Corre; A. Nathues

The physical characterization of potentially hazardous asteroids (PHAs) is important for impact hazard assessment and evaluating mitigation options. Close flybys of PHAs provide an opportunity to study their surface photometric and spectral properties that enable the identification of their source regions in the main asteroid belt. We observed PHA (357439) 2004 BL86 during a close flyby of the Earth at a distance of 1.2 million km (0.0080 AU) on 2015 January 26, with an array of ground-based telescopes to constrain its photometric and spectral properties. Lightcurve observations showed that the asteroid was a binary and subsequent radar observations confirmed the binary nature and gave a primary diameter of 300 m and a secondary diameter of 50–100 m. Our photometric observations were used to derive the phase curve of 2004 BL86 in the V-band. Two different photometric functions were fitted to this phase curve, the IAU H–G model and the Shevchenko model. From the fit of the H–G function we obtained an absolute magnitude of H = 19.51 ± 0.02 and a slope parameter of G = 0.34 ± 0.02. The Shevchenko function yielded an absolute magnitude of H = 19.03 ± 0.07 and a phase coefficient b = 0.0225 ± 0.0006. The phase coefficient was used to calculate the geometric albedo (Ag) using the relationship found by Belskaya & Schevchenko, obtaining a value of Ag = 40% ± 8% in the V-band. With the geometric albedo and the absolute magnitudes derived from the H–G and the Shevchenko functions we calculated the diameter (D) of 2004 BL86, obtaining D = 263 ± 26 and D = 328 ± 35 m, respectively. 2004 BL86 spectral band parameters and pyroxene chemistry are consistent with non-cumulate eucrite meteorites. A majority of these meteorites are derived from Vesta and are analogous with surface lava flows on a differentiated parent body. A non-diagnostic spectral curve match using the Modeling for Asteroids tool yielded a best-match with non-cumulate eucrite Bereba. Three other near-Earth asteroids (1993 VW, 1998 KK17, and 2000 XH44) that were observed by Burbine et al. also have spectral properties similar to 2004 BL86. The presence of eucrites with anomalous oxygen isotope ratios compared to the howardites, eucrites, and diogenites meteorites from Vesta suggests the possible presence of multiple differentiated bodies in the inner main belt or the contamination of Vestas surface with exogenic material. The spectral properties of both anomalous and Vestan eucrites are degenerate, making it difficult to identify the parent bodies of anomalous eucrites in the main belt and the NEO population using remote sensing. This makes it difficult to link 2004 BL86 directly to Vesta, although the Vesta family is the largest contributor of V-types to near-Earth space.


Icarus | 2017

The compositional diversity of non-Vesta basaltic asteroids

Thomas B. Leith; Nicholas A. Moskovitz; R. G. Mayne; Francesca E. DeMeo; Driss Takir; B. Burt; Richard P. Binzel; Dimitra Pefkou

Abstract We present near-infrared (0.78–2.45xa0µm) reflectance spectra for nine middle and outer main belt ( a > 2.5 AU) basaltic asteroids. Three of these objects are spectrally distinct from all classifications in the Bus-DeMeo system and could represent spectral end members in the existing taxonomy or be representatives of a new spectral type. The remainder of the sample are classified as V- or R-type. All of these asteroids are dynamically detached from the Vesta collisional family, but are too small to be intact differentiated parent bodies, implying that they originated from differentiated planetesimals which have since been destroyed or ejected from the solar system. The 1- and 2-µm band centers of all objects, determined using the Modified Gaussian Model (MGM), were compared to those of 47 Vestoids and fifteen HED meteorites of known composition. The HEDs enabled us to determine formulas relating Band 1 and Band 2 centers to pyroxene ferrosilite (Fs) compositions. Using these formulas we present the most comprehensive compositional analysis to date of middle and outer belt basaltic asteroids. We also conduct a careful error analysis of the MGM-derived band centers for implementation in future analyses. The six outer belt V- and R-type asteroids show more dispersion in parameter space than the Vestoids, reflecting greater compositional diversity than Vesta and its associated bodies. The objects analyzed have Fs numbers which are, on average, between five and ten molar percent lower than those of the Vestoids; however, identification and compositional analysis of additional outer belt basaltic asteroids would help to confirm or refute this result. Given the gradient in oxidation state which existed within the solar nebula, these results tentatively suggest that these objects formed at either a different time or location than 4 Vesta.


Icarus | 2012

Outer Main Belt asteroids: Identification and distribution of four 3-μm spectral groups

Driss Takir; Joshua Patrick Emery


Meteoritics & Planetary Science | 2013

Nature and degree of aqueous alteration in CM and CI carbonaceous chondrites

Driss Takir; Joshua Patrick Emery; Harry Y. McSween; Charles Arthur Hibbitts; Roger N. Clark; Neil Pearson; Alian Wang

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Charles Arthur Hibbitts

Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

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Lucille Le Corre

Planetary Science Institute

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William F. Bottke

Southwest Research Institute

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Carolyn M. Ernst

Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

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