Leveraging the ALMA Atacama Compact Array for Cometary Science: An Interferometric Survey of Comet C/2015 ER61 (PanSTARRS) and Evidence for a Distributed Source of Carbon Monosulfide
Nathan X. Roth, Stefanie N. Milam, Martin A. Cordiner, Dominique, Bockel\'ee-Morvan, Nicolas Biver, J\'er\'emie Boissier, Dariusz C. Lis,, Anthony J. Remijan, Steven B. Charnley

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA's ACA to map molecular emissions in comet C/2015 ER61, revealing asymmetric outgassing, distributed sources of certain molecules, and providing insights into cometary composition and activity.
Contribution
First survey of cometary volatiles with ACA, demonstrating its effectiveness in mapping molecular distributions and identifying sources in the coma.
Findings
HCN from the nucleus; others from distributed sources.
Significant extended source production for CS.
Continuum emission from outburst ejecta, not nucleus.
Abstract
We report the first survey of molecular emission from cometary volatiles using standalone Atacama Compact Array (ACA) observations of the Atacama Large Millimeter/Submillimeter Array (ALMA) toward comet C/2015 ER61 (PanSTARRS) carried out on UT 2017 April 11 and 15, shortly after its April 4 outburst. These measurements of HCN, CS, CHOH, HCO, and HNC (along with continuum emission from dust) probed the inner coma of C/2015 ER61, revealing asymmetric outgassing and discerning parent from daughter/distributed source species. This work presents spectrally integrated flux maps, autocorrelation spectra, production rates, and parent scale lengths for each molecule, and a stringent upper limit for CO. HCN is consistent with direct nucleus release in C/2015 ER61, whereas CS, HCO, HNC, and potentially CHOH are associated with distributed sources in the coma. Adopting a Haser…
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