Other
Scientific paper
Dec 1997
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1997arcn.rept..119w&link_type=abstract
Analysis of Returned Comet Nucleus Samples, Proceedings of a Workshop held at Milpitas, California, 16-18 January, 1989. Compil
Other
Comet Nuclei, Interstellar Matter, Solar System, Comets, Samples, Supernovae, Planetary Nebulae, Interstellar Chemistry, Phase Transformations, Radioactive Isotopes, Physical Properties, Solar Protons, Cosmic Dust, Crystallinity, Solar Heating, T Tauri Stars, Thermal Stresses
Scientific paper
Cometary nuclei preserve a cosmo-chemical record of conditions and processes in the primordial solar nebula, and possibly even the interstellar medium. However, that record is not perfectly preserved over the age of the solar system due to a variety of physical processes which act to modify cometary surfaces and interiors. Possible structural and/or internal processes include: collisional accretion, disruption, and reassembly during formation; internal heating by long and short-lived radionuclides; amorphous to crystalline phase transitions, and thermal stresses. Identified surface modification processes include: irradiation by galactic cosmic rays, solar protons, UV photons, and the Sun's T Tauri stage mass outflow; heating by passing stars and nearby supernovae; gardening by debris impacts; the accretion of interstellar dust and gas and accompanying erosion by hypervelocity dust impacts and sputtering; and solar heating with accompanying crust formation. These modification processes must be taken into account in both the planning and the interpretation of the results of a Comet Nucleus Sample Return Mission. Sampling of nuclei should be done at as great a depth below the surface crust as technically feasible, and at vents or fissures leading to exposed volatiles at depth. Samples of the expected cometary crust and near-surface layers also need to be returned for analysis to achieve a better understanding of the effects of these physical processes. We stress that comets are still likely less modified dm any other solar system bodies, but the degree of modification can vary greatly from one comet to the next.
Alan Stern S.
Weissman Paul R.
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