Temporal Correlation Between Outbursts and Fragmentation Events of Comet 168P/Hergenrother
Zdenek Sekanina

TL;DR
This study analyzes the timing of outbursts and fragmentation events of comet 168P/Hergenrother during its 2012 perihelion, revealing a correlation between outbursts and the release of brittle fragments.
Contribution
It introduces a method to accurately determine outburst onset times by combining nuclear magnitude data from multiple observers and correlates these with fragmentation events.
Findings
Three outbursts were precisely timed during 2012 perihelion.
Six fragmentation events coincided with the outbursts.
Most mass loss occurred during the first outburst with relatively intact fragments.
Abstract
Outbursts are known to begin with a sudden appearance and steep brightening of a "stellar nucleus" --- an unresolved image of a plume of material on its way from the comet's surface and an initial stage of an expanding halo of ejecta. Since the brightness of this feature is routinely reported, together with astrometry, by most comet observers as the "nuclear magnitude," it is straightforward to determine the onset time, a fundamental parameter of any outburst, by inspecting the chronological lists of such observations for a major jump in the nuclear brightness. Although it is inadmissible to mix nuclear magnitudes by different observers without first carefully examining their compatibility, the time constraints obtained from data sets reported by different observers can readily be combined. The intersection of these sets provides the tightest possible constraint on the outburst's onset…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Planetary Science and Exploration
