Publication
Names
  • Lyuba Moroz
  • Giuseppe Baratta
  • Giovanni Strazzulla
  • Larissa Starukhina
  • Elisabetta Dotto
  • Maria Antonietta Barucci
  • Gabriele Arnold
  • Elisa Distefano
Title
Optical alteration of complex organics induced by ion irradiation:: 1. Laboratory experiments suggest unusual space weathering trend
Abstract
Most ion irradiation experiments relevant to primitive outer Solar System objects have been performed on ice and silicate targets. Here we present the first ion irradiation experiments performed on natural complex hydrocarbons (asphaltite and kerite). These materials are very dark in the visible and have red-sloped spectra in the visible and near-infrared. They may be comparable in composition and structure to refractory organic solids on the surfaces of primitive outer Solar System objects. We irradiated the samples with 15–400 keV H+, N+, Ar++, and He+ ions and measured their reflectance spectra in the range of 0.3–2.5 μm before ion implantation and after each irradiation step. The results show that irradiation-induced carbonization gradually neutralizes the spectral slopes of these red organic solids. This implies a similar space weathering trend for the surfaces of airless bodies optically dominated by spectrally red organic components. The reduction of spectral slope was observed in all experiments. Irradiation with 30 keV protons, which transfers energy to the target mostly via electronic (inelastic) collisions, showed lower efficiency than the heavier ions. We found that spectral alteration in our experiments increased with increasing contribution of nuclear versus electronic energy loss. This implies that nuclear (elastic) energy deposition plays an important role in changing the optical properties of irradiated refractory complex hydrocarbon materials. Finally, our results indicated that temperature variations from 40 K to room temperature did not influence the spectral properties of these complex hydrocarbon solids.
Keywords
Radiation chemistry, Organic chemistry, Spectroscopy
Content
planetary sciences
Year
2004
Journal
Icarus
Volume
170
Number
1
Pages
214 - 228
Document type
article
Publication state
published