No compelling evidence of distributed production of CO in comet C/1995 O1 (Hale-Bopp) from millimeter interferometric data and a reanalysis of near-IR lines
D. Bockel\'ee-Morvan, J. Boissier, N. Biver, J. Crovisier

TL;DR
This study uses millimeter interferometry and IR line reanalysis to investigate the origin of CO in comet Hale-Bopp, finding no strong evidence for a distributed source, supporting a primarily nuclear origin.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive re-evaluation of CO production sources in Hale-Bopp using combined millimeter and IR data, challenging previous claims of a distributed source.
Findings
CO is primarily produced from the nucleus.
Extended CO sources with scale lengths >1500 km are unlikely.
Infrared CO lines are affected by optical depth effects.
Abstract
Based on long-slit infrared spectroscopic observations, it has been suggested that half of the carbon monoxide present in the atmosphere of comet C/1995 O1 (Hale-Bopp) close to perihelion was released by a distributed source in the coma, whose nature (dust or gas) remains unidentified. We re-assess the origin of CO in Hale-Bopp's coma from millimeter interferometric data and a re-analysis of the IR lines. Simultaneous observations of the CO J(1-0) (115 GHz) and J(2-1) (230 GHz) lines were undertaken with the IRAM interferometer in single-dish and interferometric modes. The diversity of angular resolutions (from 1700 to 42000 km diameter at the comet) is suitable to study the radial distribution of CO and detect the extended source observed in the infrared. We used excitation and radiative transfer models to simulate the observations. Various CO density distributions were considered,…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
