Linking surface morphology, composition, and activity on the nucleus of 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko
S. Fornasier, V.H. Hoang, P.H. Hasselmann, C. Feller, M.A. Barucci,, J.D.P. Deshapriya, H. Sierks, G. Naletto, P. L. Lamy, R. Rodrigo, D. Koschny,, B. Davidsson, J. Agarwal, C. Barbieri, J.-L. Bertaux, I. Bertini, D., Bodewits, G. Cremonese, V. Da Deppo, S. Debei, M. De Cecco

TL;DR
This study analyzes the source regions, spectral properties, and activity patterns of jets and outbursts on comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko using Rosetta data, revealing their diverse origins and triggering mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides detailed identification and characterization of over 200 jets, linking their activity to surface features and illumination conditions, and reports on the spectral and physical properties of outbursts.
Findings
Jets are mainly near morphological boundaries.
Faint jets are triggered by illumination, not terrain type.
Spectrally bluer outbursts suggest icy grains in ejected dust.
Abstract
The Rosetta space probe accompanied comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko for more than two years, obtaining an unprecedented amount of unique data of the comet nucleus and inner coma. This work focuses identifying the source regions of faint jets and outbursts and on studying the spectrophotometric properties of some outbursts. We use observations acquired with the OSIRIS/NAC camera during July-October 2015, that is, close to perihelion. More than 200 jets of different intensities were identified directly on the nucleus. Some of the more intense outbursts appear spectrally bluer than the comet dark terrain in the vivible-to-near-infrared region. We attribute this spectral behavior to icy grains mixed with the ejected dust. Some of the jets have an extremely short lifetime. They appear on the cometary surface during the color sequence observations, and vanish in less than some few minutes…
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