Organic Material on Ceres: Insights from Visible and Infrared Space Observations.
Andrea RaponiMaria Cristina De SanctisFilippo Giacomo CarrozzoMauro CiarnielloBatiste RousseauMarco FerrariEleonora AmmannitoSimone De AngelisVassilissa VinogradoffJulie C Castillo-RogezFederico TosiAlessandro FrigeriMichelangelo FormisanoFrancesca ZambonCarol A RaymondChristopher T RussellPublished in: Life (Basel, Switzerland) (2020)
The NASA/Dawn mission has acquired unprecedented measurements of the surface of the dwarf planet Ceres, the composition of which is a mixture of ultra-carbonaceous material, phyllosilicates, carbonates, organics, Fe-oxides, and volatiles as determined by remote sensing instruments including the VIR imaging spectrometer. We performed a refined analysis merging visible and infrared observations of Ceres' surface for the first time. The overall shape of the combined spectrum suggests another type of silicate not previously considered, and we confirmed a large abundance of carbon material. More importantly, by analyzing the local spectra of the organic-rich region of the Ernutet crater, we identified a reddening in the visible range, strongly correlated to the aliphatic signature at 3.4 µm. Similar reddening was found in the bright material making up Cerealia Facula in the Occator crater. This implies that organic material might be present in the source of the faculae, where brines and organics are mixed in an environment that may be favorable for prebiotic chemistry.