Literature DB >> 25624103

Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko sheds dust coat accumulated over the past four years.

Rita Schulz1, Martin Hilchenbach2, Yves Langevin3, Jochen Kissel2, Johan Silen4, Christelle Briois5, Cecile Engrand6, Klaus Hornung7, Donia Baklouti3, Anaïs Bardyn8, Hervé Cottin9, Henning Fischer2, Nicolas Fray9, Marie Godard6, Harry Lehto10, Léna Le Roy11, Sihane Merouane2, François-Régis Orthous-Daunay12, John Paquette2, Jouni Rynö4, Sandra Siljeström13, Oliver Stenzel2, Laurent Thirkell5, Kurt Varmuza14, Boris Zaprudin10.   

Abstract

Comets are composed of dust and frozen gases. The ices are mixed with the refractory material either as an icy conglomerate, or as an aggregate of pre-solar grains (grains that existed prior to the formation of the Solar System), mantled by an ice layer. The presence of water-ice grains in periodic comets is now well established. Modelling of infrared spectra obtained about ten kilometres from the nucleus of comet Hartley 2 suggests that larger dust particles are being physically decoupled from fine-grained water-ice particles that may be aggregates, which supports the icy-conglomerate model. It is known that comets build up crusts of dust that are subsequently shed as they approach perihelion. Micrometre-sized interplanetary dust particles collected in the Earth's stratosphere and certain micrometeorites are assumed to be of cometary origin. Here we report that grains collected from the Jupiter-family comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko come from a dusty crust that quenches the material outflow activity at the comet surface. The larger grains (exceeding 50 micrometres across) are fluffy (with porosity over 50 per cent), and many shattered when collected on the target plate, suggesting that they are agglomerates of entities in the size range of interplanetary dust particles. Their surfaces are generally rich in sodium, which explains the high sodium abundance in cometary meteoroids. The particles collected to date therefore probably represent parent material of interplanetary dust particles. This argues against comet dust being composed of a silicate core mantled by organic refractory material and then by a mixture of water-dominated ices. At its previous recurrence (orbital period 6.5 years), the comet's dust production doubled when it was between 2.7 and 2.5 astronomical units from the Sun, indicating that this was when the nucleus shed its mantle. Once the mantle is shed, unprocessed material starts to supply the developing coma, radically changing its dust component, which then also contains icy grains, as detected during encounters with other comets closer to the Sun.

Entities:  

Year:  2015        PMID: 25624103     DOI: 10.1038/nature14159

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  1 in total

1.  EPOXI at comet Hartley 2.

Authors:  Michael F A'Hearn; Michael J S Belton; W Alan Delamere; Lori M Feaga; Donald Hampton; Jochen Kissel; Kenneth P Klaasen; Lucy A McFadden; Karen J Meech; H Jay Melosh; Peter H Schultz; Jessica M Sunshine; Peter C Thomas; Joseph Veverka; Dennis D Wellnitz; Donald K Yeomans; Sebastien Besse; Dennis Bodewits; Timothy J Bowling; Brian T Carcich; Steven M Collins; Tony L Farnham; Olivier Groussin; Brendan Hermalyn; Michael S Kelley; Michael S Kelley; Jian-Yang Li; Don J Lindler; Carey M Lisse; Stephanie A McLaughlin; Frédéric Merlin; Silvia Protopapa; James E Richardson; Jade L Williams
Journal:  Science       Date:  2011-06-17       Impact factor: 47.728

  1 in total
  10 in total

1.  Planetary science: Cometary dust under the microscope.

Authors:  Ludmilla Kolokolova
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2016-09-01       Impact factor: 49.962

2.  High-molecular-weight organic matter in the particles of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko.

Authors:  Nicolas Fray; Anaïs Bardyn; Hervé Cottin; Kathrin Altwegg; Donia Baklouti; Christelle Briois; Luigi Colangeli; Cécile Engrand; Henning Fischer; Albrecht Glasmachers; Eberhard Grün; Gerhard Haerendel; Hartmut Henkel; Herwig Höfner; Klaus Hornung; Elmar K Jessberger; Andreas Koch; Harald Krüger; Yves Langevin; Harry Lehto; Kirsi Lehto; Léna Le Roy; Sihane Merouane; Paola Modica; François-Régis Orthous-Daunay; John Paquette; François Raulin; Jouni Rynö; Rita Schulz; Johan Silén; Sandra Siljeström; Wolfgang Steiger; Oliver Stenzel; Thomas Stephan; Laurent Thirkell; Roger Thomas; Klaus Torkar; Kurt Varmuza; Karl-Peter Wanczek; Boris Zaprudin; Jochen Kissel; Martin Hilchenbach
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2016-09-07       Impact factor: 49.962

3.  Organic Matter in Cosmic Dust.

Authors:  Scott A Sandford; Cecile Engrand; Alessandra Rotundi
Journal:  Elements (Que)       Date:  2016-06-01       Impact factor: 3.671

4.  An Infrared Spectroscopic Study Toward the Formation of Alkylphosphonic Acids and Their Precursors in Extraterrestrial Environments.

Authors:  Andrew M Turner; Matthew J Abplanalp; Tyler J Blair; Remwilyn Dayuha; Ralf I Kaiser
Journal:  Astrophys J Suppl Ser       Date:  2018-01-12       Impact factor: 8.136

Review 5.  Cometary Comae-Surface Links: The Physics of Gas and Dust from the Surface to a Spacecraft.

Authors:  Raphael Marschall; Yuri Skorov; Vladimir Zakharov; Ladislav Rezac; Selina-Barbara Gerig; Chariton Christou; S Kokou Dadzie; Alessandra Migliorini; Giovanna Rinaldi; Jessica Agarwal; Jean-Baptiste Vincent; David Kappel
Journal:  Space Sci Rev       Date:  2020-11-06       Impact factor: 8.017

Review 6.  Cometary dust: the diversity of primitive refractory grains.

Authors:  D H Wooden; H A Ishii; M E Zolensky
Journal:  Philos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci       Date:  2017-07-13       Impact factor: 4.226

7.  On the size and velocity distribution of cosmic dust particles entering the atmosphere.

Authors:  J D Carrillo-Sánchez; J M C Plane; W Feng; D Nesvorný; D Janches
Journal:  Geophys Res Lett       Date:  2015-08-13       Impact factor: 4.720

Review 8.  The Rosetta mission orbiter science overview: the comet phase.

Authors:  M G G T Taylor; N Altobelli; B J Buratti; M Choukroun
Journal:  Philos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci       Date:  2017-07-13       Impact factor: 4.226

9.  Composition of cometary particles collected during two periods of the Rosetta mission: multivariate evaluation of mass spectral data.

Authors:  Kurt Varmuza; Peter Filzmoser; Nicolas Fray; Hervé Cottin; Sihane Merouane; Oliver Stenzel; John Paquette; Jochen Kissel; Christelle Briois; Donia Baklouti; Anaïs Bardyn; Sandra Siljeström; Johan Silén; Martin Hilchenbach
Journal:  J Chemom       Date:  2020-01-27       Impact factor: 2.467

Review 10.  Evolutionary Steps in the Emergence of Life Deduced from the Bottom-Up Approach and GADV Hypothesis (Top-Down Approach).

Authors:  Kenji Ikehara
Journal:  Life (Basel)       Date:  2016-01-26
  10 in total

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