Other
Scientific paper
Oct 1996
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1996natur.383..606b&link_type=abstract
Nature, Volume 383, Issue 6601, pp. 606-608 (1996).
Other
67
Scientific paper
COMETS are rich in volatile materials, of which roughly 80% (by number) are water molecules1. Considerable progress2-4 is being made in identifying the other volatile species, the abundances of which should enable us to determine whether comets formed primarily from ice-covered interstellar grains5, or from material that was chemically processed in the early solar nebula6,7. Here we report the detection of acetylene (C2H2) in the infrared spectrum of comet C/1996 B2 (Hyakutake). The estimated abundance is 0.3-0.9%, relative to water, which is comparable to the predicted solid-phase abundance in cold interstellar clouds. This suggests that the volatiles in comet Hyakotake may have come from ice-covered interstellar grains, rather than material processed in the accretion disk out of which the Solar System formed.
Bockelée-Morvan Dominique
Brooke Timothy Young
Crisp Dave
Crovisier Jacques
Tokunaga Alan T.
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