The Surface Distributions of the Production of the Major Volatile Species, H2O, CO2, CO and O2, from the Nucleus of Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko throughout the Rosetta Mission as Measured by the ROSINA Double Focusing Mass Spectrometer
Michael Combi, Yinsi Shou, Nicolas Fougere, Valeriy Tenishev, Kathrin, Altwegg, Martin Rubin, Dominique Bockel\'ee-Morvan, Fabrizio Capaccioni,, Yu-Chi Cheng, Uwe Fink, Tamas Gombosi, Kenneth C. Hansen, Zhenguang Huang,, David Marshall, Gabor Toth

TL;DR
This study analyzes two years of in-situ measurements of major volatile species from comet 67P's nucleus during the Rosetta mission, revealing surface activity distribution, production rates, and total mass loss.
Contribution
It introduces a novel inversion scheme using spherical harmonics to map surface activity and combines it with kinetic modeling to understand volatile production.
Findings
Mapped surface activity distribution of H2O, CO2, CO, O2.
Quantified total mass loss of the comet over the mission.
Compared in-situ production rates with remote sensing data.
Abstract
The Rosetta Orbiter Spectrometer for Ion and Neutral Analysis (ROSINA) suite of instruments operated throughout the over two years of the Rosetta mission operations in the vicinity of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. It measured gas densities and composition throughout the comet's atmosphere, or coma. Here we present two-years' worth of measurements of the relative densities of the four major volatile species in the coma of the comet, H2O. CO2, CO and O2, by one of the ROSINA sub-systems called the Double Focusing Mass Spectrometer (DFMS). The absolute total gas densities were provided by the Comet Pressure Sensor (COPS), another ROSINA sub-system. DFMS is a very high mass resolution and high sensitivity mass spectrometer able to resolve at a tiny fraction of an atomic mass unit. We have analyzed the combined DFMS and COPS measurements using an inversion scheme based on spherical…
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