A McDonald Observatory Study of Comet 19P/Borrelly: Placing the Deep Space 1 Observations into a Broader Context

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics

Scientific paper

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Accepted for Icarus; 36 manuscript pages (includes 11 figures and 2 tables); Figures 4, 5 and 6 are color

Scientific paper

10.1006/icar.2002.6969

We present imaging and spectroscopic data on comet 19P/Borrelly that were obtained around the time of the Deep Space 1 encounter and in subsequent months. In the four months after perihelion, the comet showed a strong primary (sunward) jet that is aligned with the nucleus' spin axis. A weaker secondary jet on the opposite hemisphere appeared to became active around the end of 2001, when the primary jet was shutting down. We investigated the gas and dust distributions in the coma, which exhibited strong asymmetries in the sunward/anti-sunward direction. A comparison of the CN and C2 distributions from 2001 and 1994 (during times when the viewing geometry was almost identical) shows a remarkable similarity, indicating that the comet's activity is essentially repeatable from one apparition to the next. We also measured the dust reflectivities as a function of wavelength and position in the coma, and, though the dust was very red overall, we again found variations with respect to the solar direction. We used the primary jet's appearance on several dates to determine the orientation of the rotation pole to be alpha = 214^{circ}, delta = -5^{circ}. We compared this result to published images from 1994 to conclude that the nucleus is near a state of simple rotation. However, data from the 1911, 1918 and 1925 apparitions indicate that the pole might have shifted by 5-10^{circ} since the comet was discovered. Using our pole position and the published nongravitational acceleration terms, we computed a mass of the nucleus of 3.3 times10^{16} g and a bulk density of 0.49 g cm^{-3} (with a range of 0.29 < rho < 0.83 g cm^{-3}). This result is the least model-dependent comet density known to date.

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