168 research outputs found
Euler, Jacobi, and Missions to Comets and Asteroids
Whenever a freely spinning body is found in a complex rotational state, this
means that either the body is a recent victim of an impact or a tidal
interaction, or is a fragment of a recently disrupted progenitor. Another
factor (relevant for comets) is outgassing. Due to impacts, tidal forces and
outgassing, the asteroidal and cometary precession must be a generic
phenomenon: while some rotators are in the state of visible tumbling, a much
larger amount of objects must be performing narrow-cone precession not so
easily observable from the Earth. The internal dissipation in a freely
precessing top leads to relaxation (gradual damping of the precession) and
sometimes to spontaneous changes in the rotation axis. Recently developed
theory of dissipative precession of a rigid body reveals that this is a highly
nonlinear process: while the body is precessing at an angular rate ,
the precession-caused stresses and strains in the body contain components
oscillating at other frequencies. Dependent upon the spin state, those
frequencies may be higher or, most remarkably, lower than the precession rate.
In many states dissipation at the harmonics is comparable to or even exceeds
that at the principal frequency. For this and other reasons, in many spin
states the damping of asteroidal and cometary wobble happens faster, by several
orders, than believed previously. This makes it possible to measure the
precession-damping rate. The narrowing of the precession cone through the
period of about a year can be registered by the currently available
spacecraft-based observational means. However, in the near-separatrix spin
states a precessing rotator can considerably slow down its relaxation.Comment: 21 pages, 1 figur
Rotation State of Comet 103P/Hartley 2 from Radio Spectroscopy at 1 mm
The nuclei of active comets emit molecules anisotropically from discrete
vents. As the nucleus rotates, we expect to observe periodic variability in the
molecular emission line profiles, which can be studied through mm/submm
spectroscopy. Using this technique we investigated the HCN atmosphere of comet
103P/Hartley 2, the target of NASA's EPOXI mission, which had an exceptionally
favorable apparition in late 2010. We detected short-term evolution of the
spectral line profile, which was stimulated by the nucleus rotation, and which
provides evidence for rapid deceleration and excitation of the rotation state.
The measured rate of change in the rotation period is +1.00 \pm 0.15 min per
day and the period itself is 18.32 \pm 0.03 hr, both applicable at the epoch of
the EPOXI encounter. Surprisingly, the spin-down efficiency is lower by two
orders of magnitude than the measurement in comet 9P/Tempel 1 and the best
theoretical prediction. This secures rotational stability of the comet's
nucleus during the next few returns, although we anticipate a catastrophic
disruption from spin-up as its ultimate fate.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Relaxation of Wobbling Asteroids and Comets. Theoretical Problems. Perspectives of Experimental Observation
A body dissipates energy when it freely rotates about any axis different from
principal. This entails relaxation, i.e., decrease of the rotational energy,
with the angular momentum preserved. The spin about the major-inertia axis
corresponds to the minimal kinetic energy, for a fixed angular momentum. Thence
one may expect comets and asteroids (as well as spacecraft or cosmic-dust
granules) stay in this, so-called principal, state of rotation, unless they are
forced out of this state by a collision, or a tidal interaction, or cometary
jetting, or by whatever other reason. As is well known, comet P/Halley,
asteroid 4179 Toutatis, and some other small bodies exhibit very complex
rotational motions attributed to these objects being in non-principal states of
spin. Most probably, the asteroid and cometary wobble is quite a generic
phenomenon. The theory of wobble with internal dissipation has not been fully
developed as yet. In this article we demonstrate that in some spin states the
effectiveness of the inelastic-dissipation process is several orders of
magnitude higher than believed previously, and can be measured, by the
presently available observational instruments, within approximately a year
span. We also show that in some other spin states both the precession and
precession-relaxation processes slow down considerably. (We call it
near-separatrix lingering effect.) Such spin states may evolve so slowly that
they can mimic the principal-rotation state.Comment: 2 figure
Disability Justice: An Audit Tool
This toolkit is aimed at helping Black, Indigenous and POC-led organizations (that are not primarily focused around disability) examine where they're at in practicing disability justice, and where they want to learn and grow. It includes questions for self-assessment, links to access tools, organizational stories and more
The Increasing Rotation Period of Comet 10P/Tempel 2
We imaged comet 10P/Tempel 2 on 32 nights from 1999 April through 2000 March.
R-band lightcurves were obtained on 11 of these nights from 1999 April through
1999 June, prior to both the onset of significant coma activity and perihelion.
Phasing of the data yields a double-peaked lightcurve and indicates a nucleus
rotational period of 8.941 +/- 0.002 hr with a peak-to-peak amplitude of ~0.75
mag. Our data are sufficient to rule out all other possible double-peaked
solutions as well as the single- and triple- peaked solutions. This rotation
period agrees with one of five possible solutions found in post-perihelion data
from 1994 by Mueller and Ferrin (1996, Icarus, 123, 463-477), and unambiguously
eliminates their remaining four solutions. We applied our same techniques to
published lightcurves from 1988 which were obtained at an equivalent orbital
position and viewing geometry as in 1999. We found a rotation period of 8.932
+/- 0.001 hr in 1988, consistent with the findings of previous authors and
incompatible with our 1999 solution. This reveals that Tempel 2 spun-down by
~32 s between 1988 and 1999 (two intervening perihelion passages). If the
spin-down is due to a systematic torque, then the rotation period prior to
perihelion during the 2010 apparition is expected to be an additional 32 s
longer than in 1999.Comment: Accepted by The Astronomical Journal; 22 pages of text, 3 tables, 6
figure
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