Optical and Near-Infrared Polarimetry for a Highly Dormant Comet 209P/LINEAR
Daisuke Kuroda, Masateru Ishiguro, Makoto Watanabe, Hiroshi Akitaya,, Jun Takahashi, Sunao Hasegawa, Takahiro Ui, Yuka Kanda, Katsutoshi Takaki,, Ryosuke Itoh, Yuki Moritani, Masataka Imai, Shuhei Goda, Yuhei Takagi, Kumiko, Morihana, Satoshi Honda, Akira Arai, Hidekazu Hanayama

TL;DR
This study presents optical and near-infrared polarimetric observations of the highly dormant comet 209P/LINEAR, revealing maximum polarization degrees and surface properties, and comparing them with other small Solar System bodies.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed polarization measurements of 209P/LINEAR's nucleus and coma, and explores their implications for surface composition and comparison with asteroids.
Findings
Maximum polarization degree of nucleus: 30.8%
Maximum polarization degree of coma: 29.6%
Surface properties consistent with dust-rich comets
Abstract
We conducted an optical and near-infrared polarimetric observation of the highly dormant Jupiter-Family Comet, 209P/LINEAR. Because of its low activity, we were able to determine the linear polarization degrees of the coma dust particles and nucleus independently, that is =30.3% at =92.2 and =31.0% at =99.5 for the nucleus, and =28.8% at =92.2 and 29.6% at =99.5 for the coma. We detected no significant variation in at the phase angle coverage of 92.2-99.5, which may imply that the obtained polarization degrees are nearly at maximum in the phase-polarization curves. By fitting with an empirical function, we obtained the maximum values of linear polarization degrees =30.8% for the nucleus and…
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