Are there any pristine comets? Constraints from pebble structure
Uri Malamud, Wolf A. Landeck, Dorothea Bischoff, Christopher Kreuzig,, Hagai B. Perets, Bastian Gundlach, Jurgen Blum

TL;DR
This study investigates the internal structure and thermal evolution of comets formed from pebble piles, revealing that only very small comets can retain their primordial composition due to radiogenic heating effects.
Contribution
The paper introduces a new laboratory measurement of pebble thermal conductivity and applies a thermo-physical model to assess comet evolution, highlighting the impact of radionuclide abundance.
Findings
Only sub-kilometre comets can preserve primordial composition.
Larger comets undergo aqueous hydration and differentiation.
Radionuclide abundance critically influences thermal evolution.
Abstract
We show that if comets (or any small icy planetesimals such as Kuiper belt objects) are composed of pebble piles, their internal radiogenic as well as geochemical heating results in considerably different evolutionary outcomes compared to similar past studies. We utilize a 1D thermo-physical evolution code, modified to include state-of-the-art empirical measurements of pebble thermal conductivity and compression, the latter obtained through a new laboratory experiment presented here for the first time. Results indicate that due to the low pebble thermal conductivity, the peak temperatures attained during evolution are much higher than in any previous study given the same formation time. Assuming meteoritic radiogenic abundances, we find that only extremely small, sub-kilometre comets have the potential to retain the primordial, uniform and thermally unprocessed composition from which…
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