Studying the nucleus of comet 9P/Tempel 1 using the structure of the Deep Impact ejecta cloud at the early stages of its development
Ludmilla Kolokolova, Lev Nagdimunov, Michael A`Hearn, Ashley King,, Michael Wolff

TL;DR
This study analyzes the ejecta cloud from the Deep Impact collision with comet 9P/Tempel 1 to infer the nucleus's internal layering and composition through shadow and obscuration analysis.
Contribution
It introduces two novel techniques to analyze ejecta cloud structure, revealing inhomogeneities and potential layering in the comet's nucleus.
Findings
Ejecta cloud was homogeneous within initial 2 seconds.
Detected inhomogeneities indicating layering at various depths.
Estimated excavation depths suggest layered nucleus structure.
Abstract
We present an attempt to extract information about the comet 9P/Tempel 1 nucleus from the characteristics of the ejecta cloud produced by the impactor of the Deep Impact mission. For this purpose we use two techniques. We first study the shadow cast on the nucleus surface by the ejecta cloud and investigate how areas of different brightness are related to the varying optical thickness or albedo of the ejecta cloud. The shadow was seen during the first 2.0 seconds after the impact (afterward it became obscured by the ejecta cloud). We have found that all brightness variations in the shadow are the result of the surface inhomogeneities, indicating that during first 2.0 seconds the ejecta cloud was homogeneous within the MRI spatial resolution. Our second technique is to study the obscuration of the nucleus limb by the ejecta. This study covers the period 0.76- 68.8 seconds after impact…
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