The formation heritage of Jupiter Family Comet 10P/Tempel 2 as revealed by infrared spectroscopy
L. Paganini, M. J. Mumma, B. P. Bonev, G. L. Villanueva, M. A., DiSanti, J. V. Keane, and K. J. Meech

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution infrared spectroscopy to analyze the volatile composition, spatial distribution, and physical properties of comet 10P/Tempel 2, revealing insights into its formation history and activity mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides detailed measurements of volatile species, their spatial profiles, and the nucleus's physical conditions, offering new insights into the comet's formation heritage and activity sources.
Findings
Detected water production rate of (1.90 +/- 0.12) x 10^28 molecules s-1
Identified localized jet activity linked to specific volatile emissions
Observed possible distributed source from icy grain sublimation
Abstract
We present spectral and spatial information for major volatile species in Comet 10P/Tempel 2, based on high-dispersion infrared spectra acquired on UT 2010 July 26 (heliocentric distance Rh = 1.44 AU) and September 18 (Rh = 1.62 AU), following the comet's perihelion passage on UT 2010 July 04. The total production rate for water on July 26 was (1.90 +/- 0.12) x 10^28 molecules s-1, and abundances of six trace gases (relative to water) were: CH3OH (1.58% +/- 0.23), C2H6 (0.39% +/- 0.04), NH3 (0.83% +/- 0.20), and HCN (0.13% +/- 0.02). A detailed analysis of intensities for water emission lines provided a rotational temperature of 35 +/- 3 K. The mean OPR is consistent with nuclear spin populations in statistical equilibrium (OPR = 3.01 +/- 0.18), and the (1-sigma) lower bound corresponds to a spin temperature > 38 K. Our measurements were contemporaneous with a jet-like feature observed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Isotope Analysis in Ecology · Planetary Science and Exploration
