Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astronomy
Scientific paper
Aug 1988
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1988plas.rept....5a&link_type=abstract
In NASA, Washington, Reports of Planetary Astronomy, p 5-6 (SEE N89-16624 08-89)
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Astronomy
Comet Nuclei, Cometary Atmospheres, Fabry-Perot Interferometers, Halley'S Comet, Line Spectra, Astronomy, Rates (Per Time), Water
Scientific paper
Ground-based observations of coma emission line profiles permit direct insight into the composition and kinetic state of a cometary atmosphere and in turn provide much needed constraints in reconstructing a comet's history; the profiles themselves yield information on the mechanisms generating the observed species, while their intensities correspond to overall production rates by the nucleus. Intensities and line profiles at wavelength 6562.1A (H-alpha) and 6300.3A (O(1D) deday) were obtained for Comet Halley in the period March - April 1986 and for Comet Wilson in the period March 1987 using the Fabry-Perot optical facility at Arecibo; the Comet Halley observations have been undergoing careful analysis as the main effort of this project. Attention was centered on O(1D) 6300A observations obtained over four consecutive nights in April 1986. Surprisingly, the sorts of profiles to be expected in coma observations have not been theoretically developed in the past, necessitating a reappraisal of this question. It turns out that coma profiles vary noticeably according to excitation mechanism, and the proper interpretation of a profile requires the use of the appropriate model type. A paper cataloging the basic types and their interpretation will be submitted for publication in a few months. The intensities of the 6300A emission can be used independently to estimate the production rate of H2O by the comet nucleus; indeed, this may be the most reliable way of determining this basic quantity using ground-based facilities. The H2O production rates implied by our observations throughout the period March-April 1986 have been derived and are to be presented at the upcoming COSPAR special session Aeronomy of Comets and Outer Planets.
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