Exocomets from a Solar System Perspective
Paul A. Str{\o}m, Dennis Bodewits, Matthew M. Knight, Flavien Kiefer,, Geraint H. Jones, Quentin Kral, Luca Matr\`a, Eva Bodman, Maria Teresa, Capria, Ilsedore Cleeves, Alan Fitzsimmons, Nader Haghighipour, John H. D., Harrison, Daniela Iglesias, Mihkel Kama, Harold Linnartz

TL;DR
This paper compares the composition of Solar System comets and exocomets, highlighting similarities and differences to enhance understanding of their formation environments and evolutionary processes.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive comparison of compositional properties between Solar System comets and exocomets, emphasizing commonalities and differences to facilitate cross-disciplinary research.
Findings
Exocomets show compositional similarities with Solar System comets.
Interstellar comet 2I/Borisov has properties akin to Solar System comets.
Exocomets likely vary in composition based on their formation environments.
Abstract
Exocomets are small bodies releasing gas and dust which orbit stars other than the Sun. Their existence was first inferred from the detection of variable absorption features in stellar spectra in the late 1980s using spectroscopy. More recently, they have been detected through photometric transits from space, and through far-IR/mm gas emission within debris disks. As (exo)comets are considered to contain the most pristine material accessible in stellar systems, they hold the potential to give us information about early stage formation and evolution conditions of extra Solar Systems. In the Solar System, comets carry the physical and chemical memory of the protoplanetary disk environment where they formed, providing relevant information on processes in the primordial solar nebula. The aim of this paper is to compare essential compositional properties between Solar System comets and…
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