Observations of Comet ISON (C/2012 S1) from Lowell Observatory
Matthew M. Knight, David G. Schleicher

TL;DR
This study extensively observed Comet ISON in 2013, revealing its activity, dust and gas production, and morphological features, suggesting significant mass loss and possible fragmentation before perihelion.
Contribution
First detailed characterization of Comet ISON's behavior and morphology prior to perihelion, including evidence of large-scale dust ejection and nucleus weakening.
Findings
Dust production remained constant while CN gas increased significantly.
Detected a faint sunward dust fan and complex CN features.
Evidence of significant mass loss and potential fragmentation before perihelion.
Abstract
We observed dynamically new sungrazing comet ISON (C/2012 S1) extensively at Lowell Observatory throughout 2013 in order to characterize its behavior prior to perihelion. ISON had "typical" abundances for an Oort Cloud comet. Its dust production, as measured by Afrho, remained nearly constant during the apparition but its CN gas production increased by ~50x. The minimum active area necessary to support observed water production rates exceeded the likely surface area of the nucleus and suggests a population of icy grains in the coma. Together with the flattening of the dust radial profile over time, this is consistent with ejection of a large quantity of slow moving dust and icy grains in the coma at large heliocentric distance. The dust morphology was dominated by the tail, but a faint sunward dust fan was detected in March, April, May, and September. We imaged multiple gas species in…
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