Chemical and physical properties of cometary dust
Cecile Engrand, J\'er\'emie Lasue, Diane H. Wooden, Mike E. Zolensky

TL;DR
This paper reviews the physical and chemical properties of cometary dust, highlighting recent findings from space missions, laboratory analyses, and telescopic observations, emphasizing its composition, structure, and implications for Solar System formation.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive synthesis of current knowledge on cometary dust properties, integrating data from multiple sources and discussing debates on composition and origin.
Findings
Cometary dust is mainly chondritic with high C and N content.
Organic matter indicates formation at very low temperatures.
Dust particles are porous, low-density, and have low tensile strength.
Abstract
Cometary dust particles are best preserved remnants of the matter present at the onset of the formation of the Solar System. Space missions, telescopic observations and laboratory analyses advanced the knowledge on the properties of cometary dust. Cometary samples were returned from comet 81P/Wild2 by the Stardust mission. The chondritic (porous) anhydrous interplanetary dust particles and chondritic porous micrometeorites, and the ultracarbonaceous Antarctic micrometeorites (UCAMMs) also show strong evidence for a cometary origin. The composition of cometary dust is generally chondritic, but with high C and N compared with CI. The cometary organic matter is mixed with minor amounts of crystalline and amorphous minerals. The most abundant crystalline minerals are ferromagnesian silicates, refractory minerals and low Ni Fe sulfides are also present. The presence of carbonates in cometary…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science
