1 / 21

Michael J.S. Belton National Optical Astronomy Observatories, Tucson, AZ 85716. USA

Determination of the Spin State of a Cometary Nucleus From Remote Observations: Application to 9P/Tempel 1, 1P/Halley, & 2P/Encke. Michael J.S. Belton National Optical Astronomy Observatories, Tucson, AZ 85716. USA (mbelton@noao.edu). Determination of Cometary Spin States:. Overview –

rob
Download Presentation

Michael J.S. Belton National Optical Astronomy Observatories, Tucson, AZ 85716. USA

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Determination of the Spin State of a Cometary Nucleus From Remote Observations: Application to 9P/Tempel 1, 1P/Halley, & 2P/Encke Michael J.S. Belton National Optical Astronomy Observatories, Tucson, AZ 85716. USA (mbelton@noao.edu) 33rd COSPAR Scientific Assemby, Warsaw, Poland 20 July, 2000

  2. Determination of Cometary Spin States: Overview – • To learn about cometary nuclei from Earth-based remote observations the spin state must be determined. • Several cometary nuclei may be in excited spin states. • How may such a spin state be determined from remote observations? • Application to comets of space exploration interest – 9P/Tempel 1, 1P/Halley, and 2P/Encke. Conclusions – • The spin state of 1P/Halley is excited and known • The spin state of 10P/Tempel 2 may be known; Sekanina’s hypothesis on the origin of sunward fans needs testing. • The spin states of other comets are not known • 9P/Tempel 1 and 2P/Encke are challenging cases…… 33rd COSPAR Scientific Assemby, Warsaw, Poland 20 July, 2000

  3. Value of Knowledge of Spin States • Interpretation of coma phenomena in terms of the properties of active sources on the nucleus. • Understanding observed orbital evolution under the influence of non-gravitational forces and what it tells us about processes on the nucleus. • Knowledge of excited spin states can put constraints on mass distribution in the nucleus and its shape. • Preparation for spacecraft encounters Reviews – Sekanina, Z. (1981), Whipple, F.L. (1982), Wallis, M.K. (1984), Belton, M.J.S (1991), Jewitt (1997) 33rd COSPAR Scientific Assemby, Warsaw, Poland 20 July, 2000

  4. Spin speak….. k2 = 0 k2 = 1 k2 = 0 From Belton 1991 33rd COSPAR Scientific Assemby, Warsaw, Poland 20 July, 2000

  5. Comets for which the Spin State is known: With known spin state: • 1P/Halley 3.69 d 7.1 d Belton et al (1991); Samarasinha & A’Hearn (1991) Possibly with known pole position and periodicities (hrs) • 10P/Tempel 2 8.94 Sekanina 1991; Mueller & Ferrin (1996) • 2P/Encke 15.08 8.7 Sekanina (1988); Luu & Jewitt (1990); this work. With known periodicity: • 31P/Schwassmann-Wachmann 2 5.8 hrs Luu & Jewitt (1992) • 95P/Chiron 5.9 Bus et al (1989) • 107P/Wilson-Harrington 6.1 Osip et al (1995) • C/Hyakutake 6.23 Schleicher et al (1998) • C/Hale-Bopp 11.30 Farnham & Schleicher (1997) • 28P/Neujmin 1 12.68 Campins et al (1987) • 49P/Arend-Rigaux 13.46 Millis et al (1988) • 29P/Schwassmann-Wachmann 1 14.0 32.3 Meech et al (1993) • 21P/Giacobini-Zinner 19.0 Leibowitz & Brosch (1986) • C/IRAS-Araki-Alcock 51.36 Sekanina (1988) • 109P/Swift-Tuttle 67.5 McDavid & Boice (1995) Spin-states we need to know: • 9P/Tempel 1 107.5 or 18.2 or 10.7 Meech & Belton (unpub) • 46P/Wirtanen 7.6,6 (?)Bauer et al (1996); Lamy et al Bold: complex ? Italics: time variable 33rd COSPAR Scientific Assemby, Warsaw, Poland 20 July, 2000

  6. Spin Determinations are not straightforward…… • Can the nucleus spin state be fully derived from Earth-based remotely sensed observations alone? • Photometric periodicities Millis & Schleicher (1986) • Periodic coma structures e.g. jets, arcs Hoban et al (1988) • Thermal-IR light curves Campins et al (1987) • Coma fans Sekanina (1979, 1988, 1991) • Evolution of non-gravitational forces Whipple & Sekanina (1979); Królikowska et al (1998) • Dependence of lightcurve amplitude on phase. Lightcurve epochs. Magnusson et al (1989) • 2P/Encke and 10P/Tempel 2 appear to indicate that the answer is yes. A test of Sekanina’s hypothesis is needed. Excited spin: 8 parameters Pure spin: 6 parameters needed 33rd COSPAR Scientific Assemby, Warsaw, Poland 20 July, 2000

  7. Typical coma fan structure used by Sekanina to determine pole positions. R- filter image of 10P/Tempel2 By Boehnhardt et al (1990). 30 x 30 arc sec FOV with N at the top. 1 minute exposure. Sekanina’s hypothesis: Emission fans are the products of ejection events that proceed either continually or quasi-continually from a vent (or vents) located in the general vicinity of the sunlit pole of a comet nucleus whose spin axis is oriented near the orbital plane. 33rd COSPAR Scientific Assemby, Warsaw, Poland 20 July, 2000

  8. Are comet nuclei in excited spin states common? • Discussed by Samarasinha et al (1986, 1995) and Jewitt (1991, 1997) • Jewitt (1997) finds ex ~ 0.1r2 yrs or about 2.5 yrs for a 5 km radius nucleus at 1AU. • Samarasinha (1999) has compared a number of comets with 1P/Halley which is known to be in a excited state: ex~r4/P*QH2O • ROSETTA target, 49P/Wirtanen, is most likely to be in an excited spin state. CONTOUR (2P/Encke) and DEEP IMPACT (9P/Tempel 1) targets are a possibility…. 33rd COSPAR Scientific Assemby, Warsaw, Poland 20 July, 2000

  9. Timescales for cometary processes (after Jewitt (1997) damp – Damping timescale ex – Spin excitation time dyn – Median dynamical lifetime of SPCs SPC – SPC mean orbital period dv - Devolatilization timescale  c – Max. period with no strength 33rd COSPAR Scientific Assemby, Warsaw, Poland 20 July, 2000

  10. Excitation in an 2P/Encke orbit. (Initial period= 2 days; a:b:c = 8:4:3.5; Five active areas; Q = 1.7.1028 mol/s; Orbit =2P/Encke) 0 -2 -4 LAM SAM log10k2 -6 -8 unexcited spin 2 1 log10P 0 -1 N. Samarasinha ORBIT NUMBER -2 0 20 40 60 80 100 33rd COSPAR Scientific Assemby, Warsaw, Poland 20 July, 2000

  11. 9P/Tempel 1 – an illustration of difficulties Spin periodicities determined from light curves (March 1999) by K. Meech P = 18.2 or 10.7 hrs P = 4.48 d 33rd COSPAR Scientific Assemby, Warsaw, Poland 20 July, 2000 ** The nucleus of P/Tempel 1 is highly elongated (> 2.5:1) …………something odd here?

  12. Periodograms for 9P/Tempel 1 • An outburst present on the first night? • 18.2 and 10.7 are aliased frequencies? • Is excited rotation present? 33rd COSPAR Scientific Assemby, Warsaw, Poland 20 July, 2000 ** 4.48 day periodicity looks real. 18.2 gives best periodicity for the last three nights. Excited spin looks like a reality…….

  13. The case of 1P/Halley: Why we know that the spin state is known to a good approximation, I: • Method: • Assume symmetric top based on shape. • Use VEGA and GIOTTO images to calculate P , , M(RA,dec), P (RA,dec) at T0 (time of VEGA 2 encounter). • Use Millis & Schleicher lightcurve to determine P. • Use Hoban et al Jet structures to map active areas on the nucleus. • Test: • Track complexities of Water production variability……. Spin State (Belton et al 1991): • P = 3.69 d; P = 7.1 d •  = 66 deg. • M(RA,dec) = 6.2, -60.7 deg • P (RA,dec;t0) = 313.2; -7.52 deg • T0 = JD 2446498.80556 • PT 2.84 d •  = 21.4 deg 33rd COSPAR Scientific Assemby, Warsaw, Poland 20 July, 2000

  14. The case of 1P/Halley: Why we know that the spin state is known to a good approximation, II: 33rd COSPAR Scientific Assemby, Warsaw, Poland 20 July, 2000

  15. 1P/Halley spin model fit to H2O production rate – detail: 33rd COSPAR Scientific Assemby, Warsaw, Poland 20 July, 2000

  16. 2P/Encke: Determination of periodicities • String-length (Dworetsky 1983) and phase-dispersion (Stellingwerf 1978) methods are usually used. • WindowCLEAN algorithm makes use of the “sampling window” function to remove aliases. Spurious frequencies are still possible…….. • Roberts et al (1987) • Foster (1995) • Belton & Gandhi (1988): Meech et al (1993) • Four independent data sets available: 33rd COSPAR Scientific Assemby, Warsaw, Poland 20 July, 2000

  17. 2P/Encke – A Comparison of methods WINDOWCLEAN STRING LENGTH Dirty Window Relative power Clean Residuals Fernandez thesis (1999) 10.7 data Frequency (inverse days) 33rd COSPAR Scientific Assemby, Warsaw, Poland 20 July, 2000

  18. 2P/Encke –results: Frequency (inverse days) 3.175 inv.days; P = 15.12 hr. Jewitt & Meech R Oct/Nov 1986 3.2au Jewitt & Meech R Sept 1985 4.1au Fernandez 10.7 July 1997 1.2 au Luu & Jewitt R Sept 1988 3.8au 33rd COSPAR Scientific Assemby, Warsaw, Poland 20 July, 2000

  19. 2P/Encke –WindowClean of 3.1 inv.day whitened data Luu & Jewitt R Sept 1988 3.8au Fernandez 10.7 July 1997 1.2 au Jewitt & Meech R Sept 1985 4.1au Jewitt & Meech R Oct/Nov 1986 3.2au Frequency (inverse days) 8.68 inv. days 33rd COSPAR Scientific Assemby, Warsaw, Poland 20 July, 2000

  20. 2P/Encke – Second frequency is an unexpected result. Implications if the nucleus is in an excited spin state: • Two frequencies: 1 = 3.175 inv. Days; 2 = 8.68 inv days • Using model simulations to identify periodicities (Kryszczyska et al 1999; Meech et al 1993): • 1 = 2/P & 2 = 2/P + 2/P • P= 15.2 hrs • P = 8.7 hrs • SAM or a LAM? • For SAM’s P / P> 1 (Samarasinha & A’Hearn, 1991) • Must be a LAM….. • If a > b ~ c then a/b > 2.1 consistent with lightcurve amplitudes • If a/b ~ 2.6 (Fernandez thesis using Sekanina pole) then:  ~ 52 deg • Total spin period ~6.1hr; spin vector (S) is inclined to angular momentum vector (M) by ~ 33.5 deg and circulates once every 15.2 hrs. M S P= 15.2 hrs PT = 6.1 hrs 33.5 deg P = 8.7 hrs  = 52 deg If a/b = 2.6 and b~c 33rd COSPAR Scientific Assemby, Warsaw, Poland 20 July, 2000

  21. Conclusions: • Spin states need to be determined if coma phenomena and molecular production rates are to be understood in terms of active areas on the nucleus. • Time-series photometry AND imaging are required. • The typical observational baselines (two or three 3-day runs of unevenly sampled data) are inadequate. • A test of Sekanina’s hypothesis on the origin of emission fans needs to be devised. • Use of the sampling window to remove alias periodicities in the transforms of unevenly sampled time-series is important; spectral “whitening” is recommended to get the most out of a data set. • The spin state of 1 P/Halley is approximately known – and could be improved; 10P/Tempel 2 is approximately known. • 49P/Wirtanen, 2P/Encke and 9/Tempel 1 could be in excited spin states 33rd COSPAR Scientific Assemby, Warsaw, Poland 20 July, 2000

More Related