Temporal and Spatial Aspects of Gas Release During the 2010 Apparition of Comet 103P/Hartley-2
M. J. Mumma, B. P. Bonev, G. L. Villanueva, L. Paganini, M. A., DiSanti, E. L. Gibb, J. V. Keane, K. J. Meech, G. A. Blake, R. S. Ellis, M., Lippi, H. B\~ohnhardt, and K. Magee-Sauer

TL;DR
This study measures and analyzes the release and spatial distribution of various gases from comet 103P/Hartley-2 over three months, revealing insights into its volatile composition, activity, and nucleus structure.
Contribution
First detailed multi-species volatile release analysis of comet 103P/Hartley-2 over an extended period, linking gas composition to nucleus activity and structure.
Findings
Gas release rates are consistent with nucleus rotation.
Ensemble gas composition remains stable over time.
Spatial distributions suggest separate ice phases and active vents.
Abstract
We report measurements of eight primary volatiles (H2O, HCN, CH4, C2H6, CH3OH, C2H2, H2CO, and NH3) and two product species (OH and NH2) in comet 103P/Hartley-2 using high dispersion infrared spectroscopy. We quantified the long- and short-term behavior of volatile release over a three-month interval that encompassed the comet's close approach to Earth, its perihelion passage, and flyby of the comet by the Deep Impact spacecraft during the EPOXI mission. We present production rates for individual species, their mixing ratios relative to water, and their spatial distributions in the coma on multiple dates. The production rates for water, ethane, HCN, and methanol vary in a manner consistent with independent measures of nucleus rotation, but mixing ratios for HCN, C2H6, & CH3OH are independent of rotational phase. Our results demonstrate that the ensemble average composition of gas…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Isotope Analysis in Ecology · Atmospheric Ozone and Climate
