Non-Gravitational Forces and Spin Evolution of Comets
Roman R. Rafikov (Cambridge, DAMTP, IAS)

TL;DR
This study establishes a linear relationship between non-gravitational forces and spin evolution in comets, providing a framework to predict spin changes and identify comets most susceptible to outgassing-induced fission.
Contribution
The paper introduces a model linking cometary non-gravitational acceleration to spin rate changes, and empirically determines the lever arm parameter $6$ for multiple comets.
Findings
The proportionality constant $6$ has a small average value with significant spread.
Most comets are predicted to have modest spin period changes, with few exceeding 20 minutes per orbit.
Outgassing-driven spin-up likely plays a key role in cometary fission processes.
Abstract
Motion of many comets is affected by non-gravitational forces caused by outgassing from their surfaces. Outgassing also produces reactive torques resulting in cometary spin evolution. We propose that the two processes are correlated and show that the change of cometary spin rate over its heliocentric orbit scales linearly with the amplitude of its non-gravitational acceleration. The proportionality constant depends on the comet size and orbital elements (semi-major axis and eccentricity) and on the (dimensionless) lever arm parameter that relates the outgassing-induced torque and acceleration. We determine for 7 comets for which both non-gravitational acceleration and change of spin period were measured and verify this relation. This sample spanning almost 4 decades in yields , surprisingly small value and spread. We then…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Planetary Science and Exploration
