Implications of the Small Spin Changes Measured for Large Jupiter-Family Comet Nuclei
Rosita Kokotanekova, Colin Snodgrass, Pedro Lacerda, Simon F. Green,, Plamen Nikolov, Tanyu Bonev

TL;DR
This study investigates the rotational stability of large Jupiter-family comets, finding they generally do not undergo significant spin changes, which implies they are less prone to splitting and have longer survival times than smaller comets.
Contribution
It provides the first constraints on spin changes for large JFCs, suggesting size influences their rotational stability and survival, supported by observational data and numerical studies.
Findings
Large JFCs show no detectable spin changes.
Large nuclei are less likely to split due to rotation.
Supportive evidence from size distributions and orbital dynamics.
Abstract
Rotational spin-up due to outgassing of comet nuclei has been identified as a possible mechanism for considerable mass-loss and splitting. We report a search for spin changes for three large Jupiter-family comets (JFCs): 14P/Wolf, 143P/Kowal-Mrkos, and 162P/Siding Spring. None of the three comets has detectable period changes, and we set conservative upper limits of 4.2 (14P), 6.6 (143P) and 25 (162P) minutes per orbit. Comparing these results with all eight other JFCs with measured rotational changes, we deduce that none of the observed large JFCs experiences significant spin changes. This suggests that large comet nuclei are less likely to undergo rotationally-driven splitting, and therefore more likely to survive more perihelion passages than smaller nuclei. We find supporting evidence for this hypothesis in the cumulative size distributions of JFCs and dormant comets, as well as in…
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