Dust production rates in Jupiter-family comets II: Trends and population insights from ATLAS photometry of 116 JFCs
A. Fraser Gillan, Alan Fitzsimmons, Larry Denneau, Robert J. Siverd, Ken W. Smith, John L. Tonry, David R. Young

TL;DR
This study analyzes dust production rates in 116 Jupiter-family comets using ATLAS photometry, revealing activity trends around perihelion, differences in pre- and post-perihelion activity, and characterizing outbursts and nucleus sizes.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of dust activity in a large JFC sample, highlighting perihelion activity patterns and outburst characteristics with new statistical insights.
Findings
JFCs tend to reach maximum dust production post-perihelion.
Significant differences exist between pre- and post-perihelion activity indices.
Six comet outbursts were identified with an average brightness increase of 1.3 magnitudes.
Abstract
Jupiter-family comets (JFCs) have orbital periods of less than 20 years and therefore undergo more frequent sublimation compared to other comet populations. The JFCs therefore represent the ideal dynamical population for investigating the dust production rates at high-cadence. We analyzed observations by the Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS) of 74 JFCs that reached perihelion in 2022 and 2023. The work contained in this study builds upon our previous work (Gillan et al. 2024), for a total of 116 JFCs over a four-year period. Using the Afrho parameter, we measured the dust production rates of each JFC as a function of heliocentric distance. We found that there remained a clear preference for JFCs to reach their maximum A(0)frho post-perihelion, with 170P/Christensen, 254P/McNaught and P/2020 WJ5 (Lemmon) reaching a maximum A(0)frho between 200-400 days after…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Planetary Science and Exploration · Nuclear physics research studies
