Spectral mineralogy of terrestrial planets: scanning their surfaces remotely
- 1 April 1989
- journal article
- Published by Mineralogical Society in Mineralogical Magazine
- Vol. 53 (370) , 135-151
- https://doi.org/10.1180/minmag.1989.053.370.02
Abstract
Spectral measurements of sunlight reflected from planetary surfaces, when correlated with experimental visible-near-infrared spectra of rock-forming minerals, are being used to detect transition metal cations, to identify constituent minerals, and to determine modal mineralogies of regoliths on terrestrial planets. Such remote-sensed reflectance spectra measured through earth-based telescopes may have absorption bands in the one micron and two micron wavelength regions which originate from crystal field transitions within Fe2+ ions. Pyroxenes with Fe2+ in M2 positions dominate the spectra, and the resulting 1 μm versus 2 µm spectral determinative curve is used to identify compositions and structure-types of pyroxenes on surfaces of the Moon, Mercury, and asteroids, after correcting for experimentally-determined temperature-shifts of peak positions. Olivines and Fe2+-bearing plagioclase feldspars also give diagnostic peaks in the 1 µm region, while tetrahedral Fe2+ in glasses absorb in the 2 µm region as well. Opaque ilmenite, spinel and metallic iron phases mask all of these Fe2+ spectral features. Laboratory studies of mixed-mineral assemblages enable coexisting Fe2+ phases to be identified in remote-sensed reflectance spectra of regoliths. Thus, noritic rocks in the lunar highlands, troctolites in central peaks of impact craters such as Copernicus, and high-Ti and low-Ti mare basalts have been mapped on the Moon's surface by telescopic reflectance spectroscopy. The Venusian atmosphere prevents remote-sensed spectral measurements of its surface mineralogy, while atmospheric CO2 and ferric-bearing materials in the regolith on Mars interfere with pyroxene characterization in bright- and dark-region spectra. Reflectance spectral measurements of several meteorite types, including specimens from Antarctica, are consistent with a lunar highland origin for achondrite ALHA 81005 and a martian origin for shergottite EETA 79001, although source regions may not be outermost surfaces of the Moon and Mars. Correlations with asteroid reflectance spectra suggest that Vesta is the source of basaltic achondrites, while wide ranges of olivine/pyroxene ratios are inconsistent with an ordinary-chondrite surface composition of many asteroids. Visible-near-infrared spectrometers are destined for instrument payloads in future spacecraft missions to neighbouring solar system bodies.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Color of the Surface of VenusScience, 1986
- Composition of the lunar highland crust from near‐infrared spectroscopyReviews of Geophysics, 1986
- Terrestrial analogues of the surface rocks of Mars?Nature, 1986
- Remote sensing of lunar pyroclastic mantling depositsIcarus, 1985
- The Meteorite-Asteroid Connection: Two Olivine-Rich AsteroidsScience, 1984
- Possible lunar source areas of meteorite ALHA81005: Geochemical remote sensing informationGeophysical Research Letters, 1983
- Copernicus Crater Central Peak: Lunar Mountain of Unique CompositionScience, 1982
- Spectral Reflectivity of MarsScience, 1969
- Lunar and Martian Surfaces: Petrologic Significance of Absorption Bands in the Near-InfraredScience, 1968
- Origin of optical pleochroism in orthopyroxenesMineralogical Magazine and Journal of the Mineralogical Society, 1966