413 research outputs found
Constraints on the Spin-Pole Orientation, Jet Morphology and Rotation of Interstellar Comet 2I/Borisov with Deep HST Imaging
We present high resolution, deep imaging of interstellar comet 2I/Borisov
taken with the Hubble Space Telescope/Wide Field Camera 3 (HST/WFC3) on 2019
December 8 UTC and 2020 January 27 UTC (HST GO 16040, PI Bolin) before and
after its perihelion passage in combination with HST/WFC3 images taken on 2019
October 12 UTC and 2019 November 16 UTC (HST GO/DD 16009, PI Jewitt) before its
outburst and fragmentation of March 2020, thus observing the comet in a
relatively undisrupted state. We locate 1-2\arcsec~long (2,000 - 3,000 km
projected length) jet-like structures near the optocenter of 2I that appear to
change position angles from epoch to epoch. With the assumption that the jet is
located near the rotational pole supported by its stationary appearance on
10-100 h time frames in HST images, we determine that 2I's pole points
near = 32210, = 3710 ( =
341, = 48) and may be in a simple rotation state.
Additionally, we find evidence for possible periodicity in the HST time-series
lightcurve on the time scale of 5.3 h with a small amplitude of
0.05 mag implying a lower limit on its ratio of 1.5 unlike
the large 2 mag lightcurve observed for 1I/`Oumuamua. However, these
small lightcurve variations may not be the result of the rotation of 2I's
nucleus due to its dust-dominated light-scattering cross-section. Therefore,
uniquely constraining the pre-Solar System encounter, pre-outburst rotation
state of 2I may not be possible even with the resolution and sensitivity
provided by HST observations.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures and 3 tables, accepted for publication in MNRAS
on 23 July 202
The Dust Cloud around the White Dwarf G 29-38. II. Spectrum from 5 to 40 μm and Mid-Infrared Photometric Variability
We model the mineralogy and distribution of dust around the white dwarf G29-39 using the infrared spectrum from 1 to 35 μm. The spectral model for G29-38 dust combines a wide range of materials based on spectral studies of comets and debris disks. In order of their contribution to the mid-infrared emission, the most abundant minerals around G29-38 are amorphous carbon (λ < 8 μm), amorphous and crystalline silicates (5-40 μm), water ice (10-15 and 23-35 μm), and metal sulfides (18-28 μm). The amorphous C can be equivalently replaced by other materials (like metallic Fe) with featureless infrared spectra. The best-fitting crystalline silicate is Fe-rich pyroxene. In order to absorb enough starlight to power the observed emission, the disk must either be much thinner than the stellar radius (so that it can be heated from above and below) or it must have an opening angle wider than 2°. A "moderately optically thick" torus model fits well if the dust extends inward to 50 times the white dwarf radius, all grains hotter than 1100 K are vaporized, the optical depth from the star through the disk is τ║ = 5, and the radial density profile α r ^(–2.7); the total mass of this model disk is 2 × 10^(19) g. A physically thin (less than the white dwarf radius) and optically thick disk can contribute to the near-infrared continuum only; such a disk cannot explain the longer-wavelength continuum or strong emission features. The combination of a physically thin, optically thick inner disk and an outer, physically thick and moderately optically thin cloud or disk produces a reasonably good fit to the spectrum and requires only silicates in the outer cloud. We discuss the mineralogical results in comparison to planetary materials. The silicate composition contains minerals found from cometary spectra and meteorites, but Fe-rich pyroxene is more abundant than enstatite (Mg-rich pyroxene) or forsterite (Mg-rich olivine) in G29-38 dust, in contrast to what is found in most comet or meteorite mineralogies. Enstatite meteorites may be the most similar solar system materials to G29-38 dust. Finally, we suggest the surviving core of a "hot Jupiter" as an alternative (neither cometary nor asteroidal) origin for the debris, though further theoretical work is needed to determine if this hypothesis is viable
The Dust Trail of Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko
We report the detection of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko's dust trail and
nucleus in 24 micron Spitzer Space Telescope images taken February 2004. The
dust trail is not found in optical Palomar images taken June 2003. Both the
optical and infrared images show a distinct neck-line tail structure, offset
from the projected orbit of the comet. We compare our observations to simulated
images using a Monte Carlo approach and a dynamical model for comet dust. We
estimate the trail to be at least one orbit old (6.6 years) and consist of
particles of size >~100 micron. The neck-line is composed of similar sized
particles, particles of size but younger in age. Together, our observations and
simulations suggest grains 100 micron and larger in size dominate the total
mass ejected from the comet. The radiometric effective radius of the nucleus is
1.87 +/- 0.08 km, derived from the Spitzer observation. The Rosetta spacecraft
is expected to arrive at and orbit this comet in 2014. Assuming the trail is
comprised solely of 1 mm radius grains, we compute a low probability (~10^-3)
of a trail grain impacting with Rosetta during approach and orbit insertion.Comment: Accepted for publication in Icaru
Spitzer Space Telescope Observations of the Nucleus of Comet 103P/Hartley 2
We have used the Spitzer Space Telescope InfraRed Spectrograph (IRS) 22-μm peakup array to observe thermal emission from the nucleus and trail of comet 103P/Hartley 2, the target of NASA’s Deep Impact Extended Investigation (DIXI). The comet was observed on UT 2008 August 12 and 13, while 5.5 AU from the Sun. We obtained two 200 frame sets of photometric imaging over a 2.7 hr period. To within the errors of the measurement, we find no detection of any temporal variation between the two images. The comet showed extended emission beyond a point source in the form of a faint trail directed along the comet’s antivelocity vector. After modeling and removing the trail emission, a NEATM model for the nuclear emission with beaming parameter of 0.95 ± 0.20 indicates a small effective radius for the nucleus of 0.57 ± 0.08 km and low geometric albedo 0.028 ± 0.009 (1σ). With this nucleus size and a water production rate of 3 × 10^(28) molecules s^(-1) at perihelion, we estimate that ~100% of the surface area is actively emitting volatile material at perihelion. Reports of emission activity out to ~5 AU support our finding of a highly active nuclear surface. Compared to Deep Impact’s first target, comet 9P/Tempel 1, Hartley 2’s nucleus is one-fifth as wide (and about one-hundredth the mass) while producing a similar amount of outgassing at perihelion with about 13 times the active surface fraction. Unlike Tempel 1, comet Hartley 2 should be highly susceptible to jet driven spin-up torques, and so could be rotating at a much higher frequency. Since the amplitude of nongravitational forces are surprisingly similar for both comets, close to the ensemble average for ecliptic comets, we conclude that comet Hartley 2 must have a much more isotropic pattern of time-averaged outgassing from its nuclear surface. Barring a catastrophic breakup or major fragmentation event, the comet should be able to survive up to another 100 apparitions (~700 yr) at its current rate of mass loss
Study of the April 20, 2007 CME-Comet Interaction Event with an MHD Model
This study examines the tail disconnection event on April 20, 2007 on comet
2P/Encke, caused by a coronal mass ejection (CME) at a heliocentric distance of
0.34 AU. During their interaction, both the CME and the comet are visible with
high temporal and spatial resolution by the STEREO-A spacecraft. Previously,
only current sheets or shocks have been accepted as possible reasons for comet
tail disconnections, so it is puzzling that the CME caused this event. The MHD
simulation presented in this work reproduces the interaction process and
demonstrates how the CME triggered a tail disconnection in the April 20 event.
It is found that the CME disturbs the comet with a combination of a
sudden rotation of the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF), followed by a
gradual rotation. Such an interpretation applies our understanding
of solar wind-comet interactions to determine the \textit{in situ} IMF
orientation of the CME encountering Encke.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures, accepted by the ApJ Letter
Spectral Analysis of the Chandra Comet Survey
We present results of the analysis of cometary X-ray spectra with an extended
version of our charge exchange emission model (Bodewits et al. 2006). We have
applied this model to the sample of 8 comets thus far observed with the Chandra
X-ray observatory and ACIS spectrometer in the 300-1000 eV range. The surveyed
comets are C/1999 S4 (LINEAR), C/1999 T1 (McNaught-Hartley), C/2000 WM1
(LINEAR), 153P/2002 (Ikeya-Zhang), 2P/2003 (Encke), C/2001 Q4 (NEAT), 9P/2005
(Tempel 1) and 73P/2006-B (Schwassmann-Wachmann 3) and the observations include
a broad variety of comets, solar wind environments and observational
conditions. The interaction model is based on state selective, velocity
dependent charge exchange cross sections and is used to explore how cometary
X-ray emission depend on cometary, observational and solar wind
characteristics. It is further demonstrated that cometary X-ray spectra mainly
reflect the state of the local solar wind. The current sample of Chandra
observations was fit using the constrains of the charge exchange model, and
relative solar wind abundances were derived from the X-ray spectra. Our
analysis showed that spectral differences can be ascribed to different solar
wind states, as such identifying comets interacting with (I) fast, cold wind,
(II), slow, warm wind and (III) disturbed, fast, hot winds associated with
interplanetary coronal mass ejections. We furthermore predict the existence of
a fourth spectral class, associated with the cool, fast high latitude wind.Comment: 16 pages, 16 figures, and 7 Tables; accepted A&A (Due to space
limits, this version has lower resolution jpeg images.
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