Survey of cometary CO2, CO, and particulate emissions using the Spitzer Space Telescope: Smog check for comets
William T. Reach, Michael S. Kelley, Jeremie Vaubaillon

TL;DR
This survey of 23 comets using the Spitzer Space Telescope's infrared imaging reveals diverse gas and dust morphologies, classifies comets based on CO2+CO emissions, and identifies features like jets, spirals, and outbursts, advancing understanding of cometary activity.
Contribution
The study provides the first large-scale infrared survey of cometary CO2 and CO emissions, correlates gas content with carbon-chain molecule depletion, and documents diverse morphological features.
Findings
Comets classified as CO2+CO rich are also rich in carbon-chain molecules.
Gas emission morphologies include fans, jets, spirals, and arcs.
Radial profiles suggest constant production and free expansion of gases.
Abstract
We surveyed 23 comets using the Infrared Array Camera on the Spitzer Space Telescope in wide filters centered at 3.6 and 4.5 microns. Emission in the 3.6 micron filter arises from sunlight scattered by dust grains; these images generally have a coma near the nucleus and a tail in the antisolar direction due to dust grains swept back by solar radiation pressure. The 4.5 micron filter contains the same dust grains, as well as strong emission lines from CO2 and CO gas; these show distinct morphologies, in which cases we infer they are dominated by gas. Based on the ratio of 4.5 to 3.6 micron brightness, we classify the survey comets as CO2+CO "rich" and "poor." This classification is correlated with previous classifications by A'Hearn based on carbon-chain molecule abundance, in the sense that comets classified as "depleted" in carbon-chain molecules are also "poor" in CO2+CO. The gas…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Spacecraft Dynamics and Control · Spacecraft and Cryogenic Technologies
