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Featured researches published by Lucille Le Corre.


Science | 2012

Elemental Mapping by Dawn Reveals Exogenic H in Vesta’s Regolith

Thomas H. Prettyman; David W. Mittlefehldt; N. Yamashita; D. J. Lawrence; Andrew W. Beck; William C. Feldman; Timothy J. McCoy; H.Y. McSween; Michael J. Toplis; Timothy N. Titus; Pasquale Tricarico; Robert C. Reedy; John S. Hendricks; O. Forni; Lucille Le Corre; Jian-Yang Li; H. Mizzon; Vishnu Reddy; C.A. Raymond; C. T. Russell

Vesta to the Core Vesta is one of the largest bodies in the main asteroid belt. Unlike most other asteroids, which are fragments of once larger bodies, Vesta is thought to have survived as a protoplanet since its formation at the beginning of the solar system (see the Perspective by Binzel, published online 20 September). Based on data obtained with the Gamma Ray and Neutron Detector aboard the Dawn spacecraft, Prettyman et al. (p. 242, published online 20 September) show that Vestas reputed volatile-poor regolith contains substantial amounts of hydrogen delivered by carbonaceous chondrite impactors. Observations of pitted terrain on Vesta obtained by Dawns Framing Camera and analyzed by Denevi et al. (p. 246, published online 20 September), provide evidence for degassing of volatiles and hence the presence of hydrated materials. Finally, paleomagnetic studies by Fu et al. (p. 238) on a meteorite originating from Vesta suggest that magnetic fields existed on the surface of the asteroid 3.7 billion years ago, supporting the past existence of a magnetic core dynamo. Analysis of data from the Dawn spacecraft implies that asteroid Vesta is rich in volatiles. Using Dawn’s Gamma Ray and Neutron Detector, we tested models of Vesta’s evolution based on studies of howardite, eucrite, and diogenite (HED) meteorites. Global Fe/O and Fe/Si ratios are consistent with HED compositions. Neutron measurements confirm that a thick, diogenitic lower crust is exposed in the Rheasilvia basin, which is consistent with global magmatic differentiation. Vesta’s regolith contains substantial amounts of hydrogen. The highest hydrogen concentrations coincide with older, low-albedo regions near the equator, where water ice is unstable. The young, Rheasilvia basin contains the lowest concentrations. These observations are consistent with gradual accumulation of hydrogen by infall of carbonaceous chondrites—observed as clasts in some howardites—and subsequent removal or burial of this material by large impacts.


Science | 2012

Color and Albedo Heterogeneity of Vesta from Dawn

Vishnu Reddy; A. Nathues; Lucille Le Corre; H. Sierks; Jian-Yang Li; Robert W. Gaskell; Timothy J. McCoy; Andrew W. Beck; Stefan E. Schröder; Carle M. Pieters; Kris J. Becker; Bonnie J. Buratti; Brett W. Denevi; David T. Blewett; Ulrich R. Christensen; Michael J. Gaffey; Pablo Gutierrez-Marques; Michael D. Hicks; H. U. Keller; Thorsten Maue; S. Mottola; Lucy A. McFadden; Harry Y. McSween; David W. Mittlefehldt; David Patrick O'Brien; C.A. Raymond; C. T. Russell

A New Dawn Since 17 July 2011, NASAs spacecraft Dawn has been orbiting the asteroid Vesta—the second most massive and the third largest asteroid in the solar system (see the cover). Russell et al. (p. 684) use Dawns observations to confirm that Vesta is a small differentiated planetary body with an inner core, and represents a surviving proto-planet from the earliest epoch of solar system formation; Vesta is also confirmed as the source of the howardite-eucrite-diogenite (HED) meteorites. Jaumann et al. (p. 687) report on the asteroids overall geometry and topography, based on global surface mapping. Vestas surface is dominated by numerous impact craters and large troughs around the equatorial region. Marchi et al. (p. 690) report on Vestas complex cratering history and constrain the age of some of its major regions based on crater counts. Schenk et al. (p. 694) describe two giant impact basins located at the asteroids south pole. Both basins are young and excavated enough amounts of material to form the Vestoids—a group of asteroids with a composition similar to that of Vesta—and HED meteorites. De Sanctis et al. (p. 697) present the mineralogical characterization of Vesta, based on data obtained by Dawns visual and infrared spectrometer, revealing that this asteroid underwent a complex magmatic evolution that led to a differentiated crust and mantle. The global color variations detailed by Reddy et al. (p. 700) are unlike those of any other asteroid observed so far and are also indicative of a preserved, differentiated proto-planet. Spacecraft data provide a detailed characterization of the second most massive asteroid in the solar system. Multispectral images (0.44 to 0.98 μm) of asteroid (4) Vesta obtained by the Dawn Framing Cameras reveal global color variations that uncover and help understand the north-south hemispherical dichotomy. The signature of deep lithologies excavated during the formation of the Rheasilvia basin on the south pole has been preserved on the surface. Color variations (band depth, spectral slope, and eucrite-diogenite abundance) clearly correlate with distinct compositional units. Vesta displays the greatest variation of geometric albedo (0.10 to 0.67) of any asteroid yet observed. Four distinct color units are recognized that chronicle processes—including impact excavation, mass wasting, and space weathering—that shaped the asteroid’s surface. Vesta’s color and photometric diversity are indicative of its status as a preserved, differentiated protoplanet.


Icarus | 2012

Delivery of dark material to Vesta via carbonaceous chondritic impacts

Vishnu Reddy; Lucille Le Corre; David P. O’Brien; A. Nathues; Edward A. Cloutis; Daniel D. Durda; William F. Bottke; Megha Upendra Bhatt; David Nesvorny; D.L. Buczkowski; Jennifer E.C. Scully; E. Palmer; H. Sierks; Paul Mann; Kris J. Becker; Andrew W. Beck; David W. Mittlefehldt; Jian-Yang Li; Robert W. Gaskell; C. T. Russell; Michael J. Gaffey; Harry Y. McSween; Thomas B. McCord; Jean-Philippe Combe; David T. Blewett

NASA’s Dawn spacecraft observations of Asteroid (4) Vesta reveal a surface with the highest albedo and color variation of any asteroid we have observed so far. Terrains rich in low albedo dark material (DM) have been identified using Dawn Framing Camera (FC) 0.75 lm filter images in several geologic settings: associated with impact craters (in the ejecta blanket material and/or on the crater walls and rims); as flow-like deposits or rays commonly associated with topographic highs; and as dark spots (likely secondary impacts) nearby impact craters. This DM could be a relic of ancient volcanic activity or exogenic in origin. We report that the majority of the spectra of DM are similar to carbonaceous chondrite meteorites mixed with materials indigenous to Vesta. Using high-resolution seven color images we compared DM color properties (albedo, band depth) with laboratory measurements of possible analog materials. Band depth and albedo of DM are identical to those of carbonaceous chondrite xenolith-rich howardite Mt. Pratt (PRA) 04401. Laboratory mixtures of Murchison CM2 carbonaceous chondrite and basaltic eucrite Millbillillie also show band depth and albedo affinity to DM. Modeling of carbonaceous chondrite abundance in DM (1–6 vol.%) is consistent with howardite meteorites. We find no evidence for large-scale volcanism (exposed dikes/pyroclastic falls) as the source of DM. Our modeling efforts using impact crater scaling laws and numerical models of ejecta reaccretion suggest the delivery and emplacement of this DM on Vesta during the formation of the � 400 km Veneneia basin by a low-velocity (<2 km/s) carbonaceous impactor. This discovery is important because it strengthens the long-held idea that primitive bodies are the source of carbon and probably volatiles in the early Solar System.


Icarus | 2013

Olivine or impact melt: Nature of the ``Orange'' material on Vesta from Dawn

Lucille Le Corre; Vishnu Reddy; N. Schmedemann; Kris J. Becker; David Patrick O'Brien; N. Yamashita; Patrick N. Peplowski; Thomas H. Prettyman; Jian-Yang Li; Edward A. Cloutis; Brett W. Denevi; Thomas Kneisl; Eric E. Palmer; Robert W. Gaskell; A. Nathues; Michael J. Gaffey; David W. Mittlefehldt; W. B. Garry; H. Sierks; C. T. Russell; C.A. Raymond; Maria Cristina de Sanctis; Eleonora Ammanito

Abstract NASA’s Dawn mission observed a great variety of colored terrains on asteroid (4) Vesta during its survey with the Framing Camera (FC). Here we present a detailed study of the orange material on Vesta, which was first observed in color ratio images obtained by the FC and presents a red spectral slope. The orange material deposits can be classified into three types: (a) diffuse ejecta deposited by recent medium-size impact craters (such as Oppia), (b) lobate patches with well-defined edges (nicknamed “pumpkin patches”), and (c) ejecta rays from fresh-looking impact craters. The location of the orange diffuse ejecta from Oppia corresponds to the olivine spot nicknamed “Leslie feature” first identified by Gaffey (Gaffey, M.J. [1997]. Icarus 127, 130–157) from ground-based spectral observations. The distribution of the orange material in the FC mosaic is concentrated on the equatorial region and almost exclusively outside the Rheasilvia basin. Our in-depth analysis of the composition of this material uses complementary observations from FC, the visible and infrared spectrometer (VIR), and the Gamma Ray and Neutron Detector (GRaND). Several possible options for the composition of the orange material are investigated including, cumulate eucrite layer exposed during impact, metal delivered by impactor, olivine–orthopyroxene mixture and impact melt. Based on our analysis, the orange material on Vesta is unlikely to be metal or olivine (originally proposed by Gaffey (Gaffey, M.J. [1997]. Icarus 127, 130–157)). Analysis of the elemental composition of Oppia ejecta blanket with GRaND suggests that its orange material has ∼25% cumulate eucrite component in a howarditic mixture, whereas two other craters with orange material in their ejecta, Octavia and Arruntia, show no sign of cumulate eucrites. Morphology and topography of the orange material in Oppia and Octavia ejecta and orange patches suggests an impact melt origin. A majority of the orange patches appear to be related to the formation of the Rheasilvia basin. Combining the interpretations from the topography, geomorphology, color and spectral parameters, and elemental abundances, the most probable analog for the orange material on Vesta is impact melt.


Icarus | 2014

Chelyabinsk meteorite explains unusual spectral properties of Baptistina Asteroid Family

Vishnu Reddy; Juan A. Sanchez; William F. Bottke; Edward A. Cloutis; M. R. M. Izawa; David Patrick O'Brien; Paul Mann; Matthew Cuddy; Lucille Le Corre; Michael J. Gaffey; Gary Fujihara

We investigated the spectral and compositional properties of Chelyabinsk meteorite to identify its possible parent body in the main asteroid belt. Our analysis shows that the meteorite contains two spectrally distinct but compositionally indistinguishable components of LL5 chondrite and shock blackened/impact melt material. Our X-ray diffraction analysis confirms that the two lithologies of the Chelyabinsk meteorite are extremely similar in modal mineralogy. The meteorite is compositionally similar to LL chondrite and its most probable parent asteroid in the main belt is a member of the Flora family. Our work confirms previous studies (e.g., Vernazza et al. [2008]. Nature 454, 858–860; de Leon, J., Licandro, J., Serra-Ricart, M., Pinilla-Alonso, N., Campins, H. [2010]. Astron. Astrophys. 517, A23; Dunn, T.L., Burbine, T.H., Bottke, W.F., Clark, J.P. [2013]. Icarus 222, 273–282), linking LL chondrites to the Flora family. Intimate mixture of LL5 chondrite and shock blackened/impact melt material from Chelyabinsk provides a spectral match with (8) Flora, the largest asteroid in the Flora family. The Baptistina family and Flora family overlap each other in dynamical space. Mineralogical analysis of (298) Baptistina and 11 small family members shows that their surface compositions are similar to LL chondrites, although their absorption bands are subdued and albedos lower when compared to typical S-type asteroids. A range of intimate mixtures of LL5 chondrite and shock blackened/impact melt material from Chelyabinsk provides spectral matches for all these BAF members. We suggest that the presence of a significant shock/impact melt component in the surface regolith of BAF members could be the cause of lower albedo and subdued absorption bands. The conceptual problem with part of this scenario is that impact melts are very rare within ordinary chondrites. Of the � 42,000 ordinary chondrites, less than 0.5% (203) of them contain impact melts. A major reason that impact melts are rare in meteorites is that high impact velocities (V > 10 km/s) are needed to generate the necessary shock pressures and temperatures (e.g., Pierazzo, E., Melosh, H.J. [1998]. Hydrocode modeling of oblique impacts: The fate of the projectile. In: Origin of the Earth and Moon, Proceedings of the Conference. LPI Contribution No. 957) unless the target material is highly porous. Nearly all asteroid impacts within the main belt are at � 5 km/s (Bottke, W.F., Nolan, M.C., Greenberg, R., Kolvoord, R.A. [1994]. Collisional lifetimes and impact statistics of near-Earth asteroids. In: Tucson, Gehrels T. (Ed.), Hazards Due to Comets and Asteroids. The University of Arizona Press, Arizona, pp. 337–357), which prevents them from producing much impact melt unless they are highly porous. However, shock darkening is an equally efficient process that takes place at much lower impact velocities (� 2 km/s) and can cause the observed spectral effects. Spectral effects of shock darkening and impact melt are identical. The parent asteroid of BAF was either a member of the Flora family or had the same basic composition as the Floras (LL Chondrite). The shock pressures produced during the impact event generated enough impact melt or shock blackening to alter the spectral properties of BAF, but keep the BAF composition largely unchanged. Collisional mixing of shock blackened/impact melt and LL5 chondritic material could have created the Baptistina Asteroid Family with composition identical to those of the Floras, but with subdued absorption


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

SURFACE ALBEDO AND SPECTRAL VARIABILITY OF CERES

J.-Y. Li; Vishnu Reddy; A. Nathues; Lucille Le Corre; M. R. M. Izawa; Edward A. Cloutis; Mark V. Sykes; U. Carsenty; Julie C. Castillo-Rogez; M. Hoffmann; R. Jaumann; Katrin Krohn; S. Mottola; Thomas H. Prettyman; M. Schaefer; Paul M. Schenk; Stefan E. Schröder; David A. Williams; David E. Smith; Maria T. Zuber; Alexander S. Konopliv; Ryan S. Park; C.A. Raymond; C. T. Russell

Previous observations suggested that Ceres has active, but possibly sporadic, water outgassing as well as possibly varying spectral characteristics over a timescale of months. We used all available data of Ceres collected in the past three decades from the ground and the Hubble Space Telescope, as well as the newly acquired images by the Dawn Framing Camera, to search for spectral and albedo variability on Ceres, on both a global scale and in local regions, particularly the bright spots inside the Occator crater, over timescales of a few months to decades. Our analysis has placed an upper limit on the possible temporal albedo variation on Ceres. Sporadic water vapor venting, or any possibly ongoing activity on Ceres, is not significant enough to change the albedo or the area of the bright features in the Occator crater by >15%, or the global albedo by >3% over the various timescales that we searched. Recently reported spectral slope variations can be explained by changing Sun–Ceres–Earth geometry. The active area on Ceres is less than 1 km2, too small to cause global albedo and spectral variations detectable in our data. Impact ejecta due to impacting projectiles of tens of meters in size like those known to cause observable changes to the surface albedo on Asteroid Scheila cannot cause detectable albedo change on Ceres due to its relatively large size and strong gravity. The water vapor activity on Ceres is independent of Ceres’ heliocentric distance, ruling out the possibility of the comet-like sublimation process as a possible mechanism driving the activity.


Meteoritics & Planetary Science | 2013

Lithologic mapping of HED terrains on Vesta using Dawn Framing Camera color data

Guneshwar Thangjam; Vishnu Reddy; Lucille Le Corre; A. Nathues; H. Sierks; Harald Hiesinger; Jian-Yang Li; Juan A. Sanchez; C. T. Russell; Robert W. Gaskell; C.A. Raymond

The surface composition of Vesta, the most massive intact basaltic object in the asteroid belt, is interesting because it provides us with an insight into magmatic differentiation of planetesimals that eventually coalesced to form the terrestrial planets. The distribution of lithologic and compositional units on the surface of Vesta provides important constraints on its petrologic evolution, impact history, and its relationship with vestoids and howardite-eucrite-diogenite (HED) meteorites. Using color parameters (band tilt and band curvature) originally developed for analyzing lunar data, we have identified and mapped HED terrains on Vesta in Dawn Framing Camera (FC) color data. The average color spectrum of Vesta is identical to that of howardite regions, suggesting an extensive mixing of surface regolith due to impact gardening over the course of solar system history. Our results confirm the hemispherical dichotomy (east-west and north-south) in albedo/color/composition that has been observed by earlier studies. The presence of diogenite-rich material in the southern hemisphere suggests that it was excavated during the formation of the Rheasilvia and Veneneia basins. Our lithologic mapping of HED regions provides direct evidence for magmatic evolution of Vesta with diogenite units in Rheasilvia forming the lower crust of a differentiated object.


Icarus | 2012

Composition of near-Earth Asteroid (4179) Toutatis

Vishnu Reddy; Juan A. Sanchez; Michael J. Gaffey; Paul A. Abell; Lucille Le Corre; Paul S. Hardersen

Abstract Surface composition of near-Earth Asteroid (4179) Toutatis is consistent with an undifferentiated L-chondrite composition. This is inconsistent with early observations that suggested high pyroxene iron content and a differentiated body.


Archive | 2009

Mapping Products of Titan's Surface

K. Stephan; R. Jaumann; Erich Karkoschka; Randolph L. Kirk; Jason W. Barnes; Martin G. Tomasko; Elizabeth P. Turtle; Lucille Le Corre; Mirjam Langhans; Stephane Le Mouelic; Ralph D. Lorenz; Jason Perry

Remote sensing instruments aboard the Cassini spacecraft have been observed the surface of Titan globally in the infrared and radar wavelength ranges as well as locally by the Huygens instruments revealing a wealth of new morphological features indicating a geologically active surface. We present a summary of mapping products of Titans surface derived from data of the remote sensing instruments onboard the Cassini spacecraft (ISS, VIMS, RADAR) as well as the Huygens probe (DISR) that were achieved during the nominal Cassini mission including an overview of Titans recent nomenclature.


Icarus | 2015

Photometric Properties of Ceres from Telescopic Observations using Dawn Framing Camera Color Filters

Vishnu Reddy; Jian-Yang Li; Bruce L. Gary; Juan A. Sanchez; Robert D. Stephens; Ralph Megna; Daniel R. Coley; A. Nathues; Lucille Le Corre; M. Hoffmann

Abstract The dwarf planet Ceres is likely differentiated similar to the terrestrial planets but with a water/ice dominated mantle and an aqueously altered crust. Detailed modeling of Ceres’ phase function has never been performed to understand its surface properties. The Dawn spacecraft began orbital science operations at the dwarf planet in April 2015. We observed Ceres with flight spares of the seven Dawn Framing Camera color filters mounted on ground-based telescopes over the course of three years to model its phase function versus wavelength. Our analysis shows that the modeled geometric albedos derived from both the IAU HG model and the Hapke model are consistent with a flat and featureless spectrum of Ceres, although the values are ∼10% higher than previous measurements. Our models also suggest a wavelength dependence of Ceres’ phase function. The IAU G-parameter and the Hapke single-particle phase function parameter, g, are both consistent with decreasing (shallower) phase slope with increasing wavelength. Such a wavelength dependence of phase function is consistent with reddening of spectral slope with increasing phase angle, or phase-reddening. This phase reddening is consistent with previous spectra of Ceres obtained at various phase angles archived in the literature, and consistent with the fact that the modeled geometric albedo spectrum of Ceres is the bluest of all spectra because it represents the spectrum at 0° phase angle. Ground-based FC color filter lightcurve data are consistent with HST albedo maps confirming that Ceres’ lightcurve is dominated by albedo and not shape. We detected a positive correlation between 1.1-μm absorption band depth and geometric albedo suggesting brighter areas on Ceres have absorption bands that are deeper. We did not see the “extreme” slope values measured by Perna et al. (Perna, D., et al. [2015]. Astron. Astrophys. 575 (L1-6)), which they have attributed to “resurfacing episodes” on Ceres.

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C. T. Russell

University of California

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C.A. Raymond

California Institute of Technology

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Christophe Sotin

California Institute of Technology

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Jian-Yang Li

Planetary Science Institute

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