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  • 11
    Publication Date: 2019-08-16
    Description: Recently, the geology of the surface of Vesta has been coming to light. In 1983 Gaffey first began showing maps of the surface geology of Vesta constructed from numerous spectra obtained at different times as the asteroid rotated. By noting the details of spectral variation with rotation, he was able to develop two possible gross-scale geologic maps of Vesta showing the distributions of mafic and ultramafic materials. These maps were published in 1997. Finally, the capabilities of the Hubble Space Telescope were brought to bear on Vesta and images with a resolution of about 50 km were obtained using four different filters by Binzel and co-workers. Maps produced by this team published in 1997 began to reveal the geology of Vesta in sufficient detail that crude interpretations of the geologic history of the asteroid could be attempted. Additionally, in 1993 Binzel and Xu published a study of small asteroids in the region near Vesta in orbital-element space. In this study, they showed that there are a number of asteroids a few kilometers in size with reflectance spectra like that of Vesta that form a trail in orbital-element space from near Vesta to near resonances that can more easily supply material to near-Earth space. Binzel and Xu thus concluded that these small asteroids were spells of Vesta ejected by impact and that some of their brethren had been perturbed to Earth-approaching orbits. They suggested that these latter were the immediate parents of HED meteorites. This seemed to remove a long-standing dynamical objection to Vesta as the HED parent body, as discussed by Wasson and Wetherill in 1979. Within the last few years, NASA has initiated the Discovery program of low-cost, rapid-timescale development, exploration missions. Vesta has been proposed as an object worthy of study by a Discovery mission, although a Vesta mission has not yet been selected. With all the recent activity aimed at studying Vesta and the HED meteorites, and the possibility of a space mission to Vesta, we felt that time was ripe to convene a workshop bringing together astronomers, meteoriticists, and planetary geologists to focus on what could be learned about the geologic evolution of Vesta through integrating astronomical and HED meteorite studies. This, of course, assumes that the HED meteorites are from Vesta, and this issue was specifically addressed (but not resolved) in the workshop. Indeed, it seems likely that this issue can only be resolved by returning samples from Vesta for detailed study on Earth. The workshop was held at the LPI on October 16-18,1996, and was attended by some 70 scientists. Sessions included a set of talks on Earth- and space-based astronomical observations of Vesta plus the evidence pro and con for Vesta being the HED parent body, talks on the petrology and geochemistry of HED meteorites, talks on the formation and dynamics of ejecta from Vesta, talks on the thermal history of asteroids and HED meteorites, volcanic processes and differentiation history, and a short session devoted to possible missions to Vestal By all accounts, the workshop was considered a great success, although this is the opinion of a biased set of observers.
    Keywords: Astrophysics
    Type: LPI-TR-96-02-Pt-2 , Evolution of Igneous Asteroids: Focus on Vesta and the HED Meteorites; Oct 16, 1996 - Oct 18, 1996; Houston, TX; United States
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 12
    Publication Date: 1996-12-20
    Print ISSN: 0036-8075
    Electronic ISSN: 1095-9203
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Computer Science , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
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