Mid-infrared spectra of comet nuclei
Michael S. P. Kelley, Charles E. Woodward, Robert D. Gehrz, William T., Reach, David E. Harker

TL;DR
This study presents mid-infrared spectra of comet nuclei, revealing compositional similarities with D-type asteroids and providing insights into their surface properties and origins in the early Solar System.
Contribution
First mid-infrared spectra of comet nuclei are analyzed, showing similarities with D-type asteroids and supporting a common origin hypothesis.
Findings
Spectra dominated by the comet nucleus surface.
Nucleus sizes consistent with previous estimates.
Spectral features similar to D-type asteroids.
Abstract
Jovian Trojan D-type asteroids have mid-infrared emissivity features strikingly similar to comet comae, suggesting that they have the same compositions and that the surfaces of the Trojans are highly porous. However, a direct comparison between a comet and asteroid surface has not been possible due to the paucity of spectra of comet nuclei at mid-infrared wavelengths. We present 5-35 {\mu}m thermal emission spectra of comets 10P/Tempel 2, and 49P/Arend-Rigaux observed with the Infrared Spectrograph on the Spitzer Space Telescope. Our analysis suggests the spectra are dominated by the comet nucleus. We fit each spectrum with the near-Earth asteroid thermal model (NEATM) and find sizes in agreement with previous values. However, the NEATM beaming parameters of the nuclei, 0.74 to 0.83, are systematically lower than the Jupiter-family comet population mean of 1.03+/-0.11, derived from 16-…
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