The Peculiar Volatile Composition of CO-Dominated Comet C/2016 R2 (PanSTARRS)
Adam McKay, Michael DiSanti, Michael Kelley, Matthew Knight, Maria, Womack, Kacper Wierzchos, Olga Harrington-Pinto, Boncho Bonev, Geronimo, Villanueva, Neil Dello Russo, Anita Cochran, Nicolas Biver, James Bauer,, Ronald Vervack, Jr., Erika Gibbs, Nathan Roth

TL;DR
Comet C/2016 R2 (PanSTARRS) exhibits an unusual volatile composition dominated by CO and N$_2$, with significant depletions in H$_2$O and other species, challenging typical cometary compositions and offering insights into early Solar System conditions.
Contribution
This study provides the first detailed measurements of multiple volatile species in R2 PanSTARRS, revealing its unique composition and expanding understanding of comet diversity.
Findings
High CO and N$_2$ abundances confirmed
Significant depletions in H$_2$O, HCN, CH$_3$OH, and H$_2$CO
Most species deviate from typical comet compositions
Abstract
Comet C/2016 R2 (PanSTARRS) has a peculiar volatile composition, with CO being the dominant volatile as opposed to HO and one of the largest N/CO ratios ever observed in a comet. Using observations obtained with the \textit{Spitzer Space Telescope}, NASA's Infrared Telescope Facility, the 3.5-meter ARC telescope at Apache Point Observatory, the Discovery Channel Telescope at Lowell Observatory, and the Arizona Radio Observatory 10-m Submillimeter Telescope we quantified the abundances of 12 different species in the coma of R2 PanSTARRS. We confirm the high abundances of CO and N and heavy depletions of HO, HCN, CHOH, and HCO compared to CO reported by previous studies. We provide the first measurements (or most sensitive measurements/constraints) on HO, CO, CH, CH, OCS, CH, and NH, all of which are depleted relative to CO by at…
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