The Crucial Role of Ground- and Space-Based Remote Sensing Studies of Cometary Volatiles in the Next Decade (2023-2032)
Nathan X. Roth (1, 2), Dennis Bodewits (3), Boncho Bonev (4), Anita, Cochran (5), Michael Combi (6), Martin Cordiner (1), Neil Dello Russo (7),, Michael DiSanti (1), Sara Faggi (1, 4), Lori Feaga (8), Yan Fernandez (9),, Manuela Lippi (1, 4), Adam McKay (1, 4)

TL;DR
This paper reviews the importance of remote sensing studies of cometary volatiles for understanding solar system formation, highlighting recent progress and future technological needs for population-level comet analysis.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of current remote sensing techniques, recent advancements, and outlines future scientific goals and technological requirements for comet studies from 2023 to 2032.
Findings
Remote sensing has advanced understanding of comet compositions.
Comet studies inform about solar system and interstellar material.
Future technology needs are identified for comprehensive comet analysis.
Abstract
The study of comets affords a unique window into the birth, infancy, and subsequent history of the solar system. There is strong evidence that comets incorporated pristine interstellar material as well as processed nebular matter, providing insights into the composition and prevailing conditions over wide swaths of the solar nebula at the time of planet formation. Dynamically new Oort cloud comets harbor primitive ices that have been stored thousands of astronomical units from the Sun and have suffered minimal thermal or radiative processing since their emplacement ~4.5 Gyr ago. Periodic, more dynamically evolved comets such as the Halley-type and Jupiter-family comets reveal the effects of lives spent over a range of heliocentric distances, including perihelion passages into the very inner solar system. Systematically characterizing the information imprinted in the native ice…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science
