Dynamics of High-Velocity Evanescent Clumps [HVECs] Emitted from Comet C/2011 L4 as Observed by STEREO
N.-E. Raouafi, C. M. Lisse, G. Stenborg, G. H. Jones, and C. A., Schmidt

TL;DR
This study analyzes high-velocity, evanescent clumps emitted from comet C/2011 L4, revealing their dynamics, possible composition, and interactions with solar wind, contributing to understanding cometary ejecta behavior.
Contribution
It provides detailed observations of HVECs' velocities, acceleration, and composition hypotheses, highlighting the role of solar wind and magnetic fields in their dynamics.
Findings
HVECs reach speeds of 450-600 km/s
Clumps do not significantly expand during propagation
Neutral atoms with high beta values could explain observations
Abstract
High-quality white-light images from the SECCHI/HI-1 telescope onboard STEREO-B reveal high-velocity evanescent clumps [HVECs] expelled from the coma of the C/2011 L4 [Pan-STARRS] comet. Animated images provide evidence of highly dynamic ejecta moving near-radially in the anti-sunward direction. The bulk speed of the clumps at their initial detection in the HI1-B images range from km s followed by an appreciable acceleration up to speeds of km s, which are typical of slow to intermediate solar wind speeds. The clump velocities do not exceed these limiting values and seem to reach a plateau. The images also show that the clumps do not expand as they propagate. Order of magnitude calculations show that ionized single atoms or molecules accelerate too quickly compared to observations, while dust grains micron sized or larger accelerate too slowly. We find…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics
