CO2-driven surface changes in the Hapi region on Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko
Bj\"orn J. R. Davidsson, F. Peter Schloerb, Sonia Fornasier, Nilda, Oklay, Pedro J. Guti\'errez, Bonnie J. Buratti, Artur B. Chmielewski, Samuel, Gulkis, Mark D. Hofstadter, H. Uwe Keller, Holger Sierks, Carsten G\"uttler,, Michael K\"uppers, Hans Rickman, Mathieu Choukroun

TL;DR
This study combines observational data and modeling to investigate CO2-driven surface changes on Comet 67P, revealing how near-surface CO2 ice influences pit formation and surface compaction.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel integrated approach using MIRO data and thermophysical models to understand CO2's role in surface evolution of the comet.
Findings
CO2 ice near the surface affects MIRO measurements
CO2 sublimation causes dust and water ice expulsion
Surface compaction results from sublimation pressure
Abstract
Between 2014 December 31 and 2015 March 17, the OSIRIS cameras on Rosetta documented the growth of a 140m wide and 0.5m deep depression in the Hapi region on Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. This shallow pit is one of several that later formed elsewhere on the comet, all in smooth terrain that primarily is the result of airfall of coma particles. We have compiled observations of this region in Hapi by the microwave instrument MIRO on Rosetta, acquired during October and November 2014. We use thermophysical and radiative transfer models in order to reproduce the MIRO observations. This allows us to place constraints on the thermal inertia, diffusivity, chemical composition, stratification, extinction coefficients, and scattering properties of the surface material, and how they evolved during the months prior to pit formation. The results are placed in context through long-term comet…
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