That's the way the comet crumbles: Splitting Jupiter-family comets
Y. R. Fernandez

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent observations and studies of splitting Jupiter-family comets, highlighting specific cases, recent technological insights, and future research prospects in understanding comet fragmentation.
Contribution
It synthesizes recent observational data on split comets, including new cases and insights from space telescopes, advancing understanding of comet fragmentation processes.
Findings
Multiple recent split comet cases analyzed
Space telescopes reveal detailed debris trail structures
Potential future survey breakthroughs discussed
Abstract
Our current understanding of split, Jupiter-family comets is reviewed. The focus is on what recent studies of comets have told us about the nature of the splitting phenomenon. The goal is to not repeat the information given in recent reviews of split comets, but to build upon it. In particular, we discuss comets that have suffered splitting or fragmentation events in the past few years. These include comets (a) 57P/du Toit-Neujmin-Delporte, observed with a long train of fragments in 2002; (b) 73P/Schwassmann-Wachmann 3, which split in 1995 and was extensively studied during its relatively close passage to Earth in 2006, during which dozens of fragments were discovered and studied; and (c) 174P/Echeclus, a Centaur and potentially future JFC, which split in late 2005 and was the first such Centaur observed to do so. We also discuss recent observations by SOHO of split comets that are…
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