Phase angle dependency of the dust cross section in a cometary coma
Felix Keiser, Johannes Markannen, Jessica Agarwal

TL;DR
This study analyzes how the phase angle affects dust cross section measurements in a cometary coma, revealing that surface activity distribution significantly influences observed radiance profiles.
Contribution
It introduces a numerical model to evaluate dust density and column area density dependence on phase angle, spacecraft position, and surface activity, highlighting the importance of activity distribution.
Findings
Column area density largely independent of particle size and spacecraft position.
High phase angles show significantly larger column densities with no night side activity.
Radiance profiles depend on both phase angle dependent density and scattering phase function.
Abstract
Rosetta/OSIRIS took optical measurements of the intensity of scattered light from the coma of 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko over a wide range of phase angles. These data have been used to measure the phase angle dependent radiance profile of the dust coma. We want to provide information about the column area densities of the dust coma as seen from Rosetta. This information in combination with the measured OSIRIS phase function can then be used to determine the scattering phase function of the dust particles. We use a simple numerical model to calculate the dust density in the coma. For this we neglect all forces but solar gravitation and radiation pressure. As this cannot describe particles close to the surface of the comet, we assume starting conditions at a sufficient distance. We evaluate the column area density as observed from Rosetta/OSIRIS and compare the results for different…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Planetary Science and Exploration · Space Exploration and Technology
