Optical and Near-Infrared Polarimetry of Non-Periodic Comet C/2013 US10 (Catalina)
Y. G. Kwon, M. Ishiguro, D. Kuroda, H. Hanayama, K. S. Kawabata, H., Akitaya, T. Nakaoka, R. Itoh, H. Toda, K. Yanagisawa, M.-G. Lee, K. Ohta, M., Yoshida, N. Kawai, and J.-I. Watanabe

TL;DR
This study uses optical and near-infrared polarimetry to analyze comet C/2013 US10 (Catalina), revealing that gas contamination affects polarization measurements and that dust properties are similar across different comet types.
Contribution
It demonstrates that gas contamination influences polarization measurements, clarifies dust properties are consistent across comet types, and shows polarization dependence on cometocentric distance can be mitigated.
Findings
Gas contamination significantly affects polarization signals.
Dust polarization degrees are similar in low- and high-polarization comets.
Polarimetric properties are independent of dust size distribution.
Abstract
We present an optical and near-infrared (hereafter NIR) polarimetric study of a comet C/2013 US10 (Catalina) observed on UT 2015 December 17-18 at phase angles of =52.1 deg - 53.1 deg. Additionally, we obtained an optical spectrum and multi-band images to examine the influence of gas emission. We find that the observed optical signals are significantly influenced by gas emission, that is, the gas-to-total intensity ratio varies from 5 to 30 % in the and 3 to 18 % in the bands, depending on the position in the coma. We derive the `gas-free dust polarization degrees' of 13.81.0 % in the and 12.51.1 % in the bands and a gray polarimetric color, i.e., -8.79.9 % in optical and 1.60.9 % in NIR. The increments of polarization obtained from the gas correction show that the…
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