No known body in the Solar System has a spectrum redder than that of object 5145 Pholus. We use Hapke scattering theory and optical constants measured in this laboratory to examine the ability of mixtures of a number of organic solids and ices to reproduce the observed spectrum and phase variation. The primary materials considered are poly-HCN, kerogen, Murchison organic extract, Titan tholin, ice tholin, and water ice. In a computer grid search of over 10 million models, we find an intraparticle mixture of 15% Titan tholin, 10% poly-HCN, and 75% water ice with 10-μm particles to provide an excellent fit. Replacing water ice with ammonia ice improves the fits significantly while using a pure hydrocarbon tholin, Tholin α, instead of Titan tholin makes only modest improvements. All acceptable fits require Titan tholin or some comparable material to provide the steep slope in the visible, and poly-HCN or some comparable material to provide strong absorption in the near-infrared. A pure Titan tholin surface with 16-μm particles, as well as all acceptable Pholus models, fit the present spectrophotometric data for the transplutonian object 1992 QB1. The feasibility of gas-phase chemistry to generate material like Titan tholin on such small objects is examined. An irradiated transient atmosphere arising from sublimating ices may generate at most a few centimeters of tholin over the lifetime of the Solar System, but this is insignificant compared to the expected lag deposit of primordial contaminants left behind by the sublimating ice. Irradiation of subsurface N2/CH4 ice by cosmic rays may generate ∼20 cm of tholin in the upper 10 m of regolith in the some time scale but the identity of this tholin to its gasphase equivalent has not been demonstrated. © 1994 by Academic Press, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Wilson, P. D., Sagan, C., & Thompson, W. R. (1994). The Organic Surface of 5145 Pholus: Constraints Set by Scattering Theory. Icarus, 107(2), 288–303. https://doi.org/10.1006/icar.1994.1024
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