The Nucleus of Comet 10P/Tempel 2 in 2013 and Consequences Regarding Its Rotational State: Early Science from the Discovery Channel Telescope
David G. Schleicher, Matthew M. Knight, Stephen E. Levine

TL;DR
This study used early 2013 observations from the Discovery Channel Telescope to measure Comet 10P/Tempel 2's rotation period, confirming its prograde rotation and analyzing its spin-down behavior and nucleus shape.
Contribution
First light data from the Discovery Channel Telescope provided precise rotation period measurements and confirmed the comet's prograde rotation, clarifying its spin-down trend and nucleus shape.
Findings
Confirmed prograde rotation with a synodic period of 8.948 hours in 2013
Ruled out retrograde rotation based on period differences
Observed a small lightcurve amplitude indicating a highly irregular nucleus
Abstract
We present new lightcurve measurements of Comet 10P/Tempel 2 carried out with Lowell Observatory's Discovery Channel Telescope in early 2013 when the comet was at aphelion. These data represent some of the first science obtained with this new 4.3-m facility. With Tempel 2 having been observed to exhibit a small but ongoing spin-down in its rotation period for over two decades, our primary goals at this time were two-fold. First, to determine its current rotation period and compare it to that measured shortly after its most recent perihelion passage in 2010, and second, to disentangle the spin-down from synodic effects due to the solar day and the Earth's orbital motion and to determine the sense of rotation, i.e. prograde or retrograde. At our midpoint of 2013 Feb 24, the observed synodic period is 8.948+/-0.001 hr, exactly matching the predicted prograde rotation solution based on 2010…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Isotope Analysis in Ecology · Space Exploration and Technology
