Radio observations of Jupiter-family comets
J. Crovisier, N. Biver, D. Bockel\'ee-Morvan, P. Colom

TL;DR
Radio observations are essential for studying comet composition, physical conditions, and dust, with Jupiter-family comets being less studied due to their low activity but offering unique observation opportunities.
Contribution
This review highlights the role of radio observations in understanding Jupiter-family comets and discusses the challenges and findings related to their physical and chemical properties.
Findings
Radio techniques have observed about a dozen JFCs.
No clear differences found between JFCs and other comet families.
JFCs' low activity makes them challenging but valuable targets.
Abstract
Radio observations from decimetric to submillimetric wavelengths are now a basic tool for the investigation of comets. Spectroscopic observations allow us i) to monitor the gas production rate of the comets, by directly observing the water molecule, or by observing secondary products (e.g., the OH radical) or minor species (e.g., HCN); ii) to investigate the chemical composition of comets; iii) to probe the physical conditions of cometary atmospheres: kinetic temperature and expansion velocity. Continuum observations probe large-size dust particles and (for the largest objects) cometary nuclei. Comets are classified from their orbital characteristics into two separate classes: i) nearly-isotropic, mainly long-period comets and ii) ecliptic, short-period comets, the so-called Jupiter-family comets. These two classes apparently come from two different reservoirs, respectively the Oort…
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