Dust Impact Monitor (SESAME-DIM) Measurements at Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko
Harald Kr\"uger, Klaus J. Seidensticker, Hans-Herbert Fischer, Thomas, Albin, Istvan Apathy, Walter Arnold, Alberto Flandes, Attila Hirn, Masanori, Kobayashi, Alexander Loose, Attila Peter, Morris Podolak

TL;DR
The paper reports in-situ measurements of dust particles by the DIM instrument on Philae during its mission at comet 67P, providing the closest dust detection at a cometary nucleus and insights into particle properties.
Contribution
First in-situ detection of millimeter-sized dust particles near a comet nucleus using the SESAME-DIM instrument on Philae.
Findings
Detected one millimeter-sized particle during descent.
No dust detected at final landing site, possibly due to low activity or shading.
Particle properties suggest a porous structure with ~250 kg/m^3 density.
Abstract
The Rosetta lander Philae successfully landed on the nucleus of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko on 12 November 2014. Philae carries the Dust Impact Monitor (DIM) on board, which is part of the Surface Electric Sounding and Acoustic Monitoring Experiment (SESAME). DIM employs piezoelectric PZT sensors to detect impacts by sub-millimeter and millimeter-sized ice and dust particles that are emitted from the nucleus and transported into the cometary coma. The DIM sensor measures dynamical data like flux and the directionality of the impacting particles. Mass and speed of the particles can be constrained assuming density and elastic particle properties. DIM was operated during three mission phases of Philae at the comet: (1) Before Philae's separation from Rosetta at distances of about 9.6 km, 11.8 km, and 25.3 km from the nucleus barycenter. In this mission phase particles released from the…
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