Helios spacecraft data revisited: Detection of cometary meteoroid trails by in-situ dust impacts
Harald Kr\"uger, Peter Strub, Max Sommer, Nicolas Altobelli, Hiroshi, Kimura, Ann-Kathrin Lohse, Eberhard Gr\"un, Ralf Srama

TL;DR
This study re-analyzed Helios spacecraft dust data from the 1970s, identifying in-situ meteoroid trail particles linked to comets 45P and 72P, demonstrating the potential for remote compositional analysis of comets via spacecraft dust impact data.
Contribution
It introduces a novel re-analysis of historical dust data using the IMEX model, confirming cometary trail particles and their sources from in-situ impacts.
Findings
Four particles linked to specific comets based on impact data.
Dust density in trails estimated at 10^-8 to 10^-7 m^-3.
Demonstrates potential for remote comet analysis via dust impacts.
Abstract
Cometary meteoroid trails exist in the vicinity of comets, forming fine structure of the interplanetary dust cloud. The trails consist predominantly of cometary particles with sizes of approximately 0.1 mm to 1 cm which are ejected at low speeds and remain very close to the comet orbit for several revolutions around the Sun. When re-analysing the Helios dust data measured in the 1970s, Altobelli et al. (2006) recognized a clustering of seven impacts, detected in a very narrow region of space at a true anomaly angle of 135 deg, which the authors considered as potential cometary trail particles. We re-analyse these candidate cometary trail particles to investigate the possibility that some or all of them indeed originate from cometary trails and we constrain their source comets. The Interplanetary Meteoroid Environment for eXploration (IMEX) dust streams in space model is a new universal…
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