Analyse der Plasmakoma des Kometen P/Halley mittels Bildverarbeitung der Bochumer Photoplatten

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astronomy

Scientific paper

Rate now

  [ 0.00 ] – not rated yet Voters 0   Comments 0

Details

5

Comet P/Halley, Comets, Cometary Plasma

Scientific paper

Photographic and photoeletric observations of comet P/Halley's ion gas coma from CO+ at 4250 A were part of the Bochum Halley Monitoring Program, conducted from 1986 February 17, to April 17 at the European Southern Observatory on La Silla (Chile). In this spectral range it is possible to watch the continuous formation, motion and expansion of plasma structures. To observe the morphology of these structures 32 CO+ photos (glass plates) from P/Halley's comet have been analysed. They have a field of view of 28.6 X 28.6 degrees and were obtained from 1986 March 29, to April 17 with exposure times between 20 and 120 minutes. All photos were digitized with a PDS 2020 GM (Photometric Data System) microdensitometer at the Astronomisches Institut der Westfalischen Wilhelms-Universitaet in Muenster (one pixel = 25 X 25 microns approximately 46.88 X 46.88 arcsec). After digitization the data were reduced to relative intensities, and the part with proper calibrations were also converted to absolute intensities, expressed in terms of column densities using the image data systems MIDAS (Munich Image Data Analysis System; ESO - Image Processing Group, 1988) and IHAP (Image Handling And Processing; Middleburg, 1983). With the help of the Stellingwerf-Theta-Minimum-Method (Stellingwerf, 1978) a period of (2.22 +/- 0.09) days result from analysis of structures in the plasma-coma by subtracting subsequent images. The idea behind subtracting subsequent images is that rotation effects are only 10% phenomena on gas distribution. Difference images are than used to supress the static component of the gas cloud. The CO+ column density data (in molecules cm^-2) were compared with the data of CN column density from Schulz (1990) in all common days. The results show that the relations between CO+ and CN in average column density values (N_CO^+/N_CN) are 11.6 for a circular slit with average diameter (Phi) of 6.1 arcminute which corresponds to a distance from the nucleus (rho) equal to 6.3 X 10^4 km; 20.0 for Phi = 7.1 arcminute and rho = 7.3 X 10^4 km; 8.1 for Phi = 8.5 arcminute and rho = 8.7 X 10^4 km; 35.6 for Phi = 11.9 arcminute and rho = 1.2 X 10^5 km; and 31.3 for Phi = 16.7 arcminute and rho = 1.7 X 10^5 km. These values are in perfect agreement with the data from Vivekananda et al. (1990) for short distances (rho from 3.9 X 10^3 to 1.2 X 10^4 km) and small slit diameters (Phi 0.4 to 1.2 arcminutes). With the use of slits with large diameters it is possible to get some information about the outer coma of the comet (in this work, from 60000 until 170000 km far away from the nucleus). At these distances (about 10^5 km) the CO+ column density changes only due to the geometrical dilution, because the CO+ parent molecules are already photoionized or photodissociated (Voelzke, 1989), which means that through different processes the neutral gas that flows to about 10^5 km from the nucleus is already transformed into ionized gas.

No associations

LandOfFree

Say what you really think

Search LandOfFree.com for scientists and scientific papers. Rate them and share your experience with other people.

Rating

Analyse der Plasmakoma des Kometen P/Halley mittels Bildverarbeitung der Bochumer Photoplatten does not yet have a rating. At this time, there are no reviews or comments for this scientific paper.

If you have personal experience with Analyse der Plasmakoma des Kometen P/Halley mittels Bildverarbeitung der Bochumer Photoplatten, we encourage you to share that experience with our LandOfFree.com community. Your opinion is very important and Analyse der Plasmakoma des Kometen P/Halley mittels Bildverarbeitung der Bochumer Photoplatten will most certainly appreciate the feedback.

Rate now

     

Profile ID: LFWR-SCP-O-1301381

  Search
All data on this website is collected from public sources. Our data reflects the most accurate information available at the time of publication.