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Featured researches published by C. Feller.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2015

Spectrophotometric properties of the nucleus of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko from the OSIRIS instrument onboard the Rosetta spacecraft

S. Fornasier; P. H. Hasselmann; M. A. Barucci; C. Feller; Sebastien Besse; C. Leyrat; Luisa M. Lara; Pedro J. Gutierrez; N. Oklay; C. Tubiana; Frank Scholten; H. Sierks; Cesare Barbieri; P. L. Lamy; R. Rodrigo; D. Koschny; Hans Rickman; H. U. Keller; Jessica Agarwal; Michael F. A’Hearn; I. Bertini; G. Cremonese; Vania Da Deppo; B. Davidsson; Stefano Debei; Mariolino De Cecco; M. Fulle; Olivier Groussin; C. Güttler; S. F. Hviid

The Rosetta mission of the European Space Agency has been orbiting the comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko (67P) since August 2014 and is now in its escort phase. A large complement of scientific experiments designed to complete the most detailed study of a comet ever attempted are onboard Rosetta. Aims. We present results for the photometric and spectrophotometric properties of the nucleus of 67P derived from the OSIRIS imaging system, which consists of a Wide Angle Camera (WAC) and a Narrow Angle Camera (NAC). The observations presented here were performed during July and the beginning of August 2014, during the approach phase, when OSIRIS was mapping the surface of the comet with several filters at different phase angles (1.3°–54°). The resolution reached up to 2.1 m/px. Methods. The OSIRIS images were processed with the OSIRIS standard pipeline, then converted into I/F radiance factors and corrected for the illumination conditions at each pixel using the Lommel-Seeliger disk law. Color cubes of the surface were produced by stacking registered and illumination-corrected images. Furthermore, photometric analysis was performed both on disk-averaged photometry in several filters and on disk-resolved images acquired with the NAC orange filter, centered at 649 nm, using Hapke modeling. Results. The disk-averaged phase function of the nucleus of 67P shows a strong opposition surge with a G parameter value of - 0.13±0.01 in the HG system formalism and an absolute magnitude Hv (1, 1, 0) = 15.74±0.02 mag. The integrated spectrophotometry in 20 filters covering the 250-1000 nm wavelength range shows a red spectral behavior, without clear absorption bands except for a potential absorption centered at ∼ 290 nm that is possibly due to SO2 ice. The nucleus shows strong phase reddening, with disk- averaged spectral slopes increasing from 11%/(100 nm) to 16%/(100 nm) in the 1.3°–54° phase angle range. The geometric albedo of the comet is 6.5±0.2% at 649 nm, with local variations of up to ∼ 16% in the Hapi region. From the disk-resolved images we computed the spectral slope together with local spectrophotometry and identified three distinct groups of regions (blue, moderately red, and red). The Hapi region is the brightest, the bluest in term of spectral slope, and the most active surface on the comet. Local spectrophotometry shows an enhancement of the flux in the 700-750 nm that is associated with coma emissions.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016

The primordial nucleus of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko

B. Davidsson; H. Sierks; C. Güttler; Francesco Marzari; M. Pajola; Hans Rickman; Michael F. A’Hearn; A.-T. Auger; M. R. El-Maarry; S. Fornasier; Pedro J. Gutierrez; H. U. Keller; M. Massironi; C. Snodgrass; Jean-Baptiste Vincent; Cesare Barbieri; P. L. Lamy; R. Rodrigo; D. Koschny; M. A. Barucci; J.-L. Bertaux; I. Bertini; G. Cremonese; V. Da Deppo; Stefano Debei; M. De Cecco; C. Feller; M. Fulle; Olivier Groussin; S. F. Hviid

We investigate the formation and evolution of comet nuclei and other trans-Neptunian objects (TNOs) in the solar nebula and primordial disk prior to the giant planet orbit instability foreseen by the Nice model. Aims. Our goal is to determine whether most observed comet nuclei are primordial rubble-pile survivors that formed in the solar nebula and young primordial disk or collisional rubble piles formed later in the aftermath of catastrophic disruptions of larger parent bodies. We also propose a concurrent comet and TNO formation scenario that is consistent with observations. Methods. We used observations of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko by the ESA Rosetta spacecraft, particularly by the OSIRIS camera system, combined with data from the NASA Stardust sample-return mission to comet 81P/Wild 2 and from meteoritics; we also used existing observations from ground or from spacecraft of irregular satellites of the giant planets, Centaurs, and TNOs. We performed modeling of thermophysics, hydrostatics, orbit evolution, and collision physics. Results. We find that thermal processing due to short-lived radionuclides, combined with collisional processing during accretion in the primordial disk, creates a population of medium-sized bodies that are comparably dense, compacted, strong, heavily depleted in supervolatiles like CO and CO2; they contain little to no amorphous water ice, and have experienced extensive metasomatism and aqueous alteration due to liquid water. Irregular satellites Phoebe and Himalia are potential representatives of this population. Collisional rubble piles inherit these properties from their parents. Contrarily, comet nuclei have low density, high porosity, weak strength, are rich in supervolatiles, may contain amorphous water ice, and do not display convincing evidence of in situ metasomatism or aqueous alteration. We outline a comet formation scenario that starts in the solar nebula and ends in the primordial disk, that reproduces these observed properties, and additionally explains the presence of extensive layering on 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko (and on 9P/Tempel 1 observed by Deep Impact), its bi-lobed shape, the extremely slow growth of comet nuclei as evidenced by recent radiometric dating, and the low collision probability that allows primordial nuclei to survive the age of the solar system. Conclusions. We conclude that observed comet nuclei are primordial rubble piles, and not collisional rubble piles. We argue that TNOs formed as a result of streaming instabilities at sizes below ~400 km and that ~350 of these grew slowly in a low-mass primordial disk to the size of Triton, Pluto, and Eris, causing little viscous stirring during growth. We thus propose a dynamically cold primordial disk, which prevented medium-sized TNOs from breaking into collisional rubble piles and allowed the survival of primordial rubble-pile comets. We argue that comets formed by hierarchical agglomeration out of material that remained after TNO formation, and that this slow growth was a necessity to avoid thermal processing by short-lived radionuclides that would lead to loss of supervolatiles, and that allowed comet nuclei to incorporate ~3 Myr old material from the inner solar system.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016

Detection of exposed H2O ice on the nucleus of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko

M. A. Barucci; G. Filacchione; S. Fornasier; A. Raponi; J. D. P. Deshapriya; F. Tosi; C. Feller; M. Ciarniello; H. Sierks; F. Capaccioni; Antoine Pommerol; M. Massironi; N. Oklay; F. Merlin; Jean-Baptiste Vincent; M. Fulchignoni; A. Guilbert-Lepoutre; D. Perna; M. T. Capria; P. H. Hasselmann; B. Rousseau; Cesare Barbieri; Dominique Bockelee-Morvan; P. L. Lamy; C. De Sanctis; R. Rodrigo; S. Erard; D. Koschny; C. Leyrat; Hans Rickman

Since the orbital insertion of the Rosetta spacecraft, comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko (67P/C-G) has been mapped by OSIRIS camera and VIRTIS spectro-imager, producing a huge quantity of images and spectra of the comet’s nucleus. The aim of this work is to search for the presence of H 2 O on the nucleus which, in general, appears very dark and rich in dehydrated organic material. After selecting images of the bright spots which could be good candidates to search for H 2 O ice, taken at high resolution by OSIRIS, we check for spectral cubes of the selected coordinates to identify these spots observed by VIRTIS. Methods. The selected OSIRIS images were processed with the OSIRIS standard pipeline and corrected for the illumination condi- tions for each pixel using the Lommel-Seeliger disk law. The spots with higher I/F were selected and then analysed spectrophotomet- rically and compared with the surrounding area. We selected 13 spots as good targets to be analysed by VIRTIS to search for the 2 μm absorption band of water ice in the VIRTIS spectral cubes. Results. Out of the 13 selected bright spots, eight of them present positive H 2 O ice detection on the VIRTIS data. A spectral analysis was performed and the approximate temperature of each spot was computed. The H 2 O ice content was confirmed by modeling the spectra with mixing (areal and intimate) of H 2 O ice and dark terrain, using Hapke’s radiative transfer modeling. We also present a detailed analysis of the detected spots.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016

Detection of exposed H2O ice on the nucleus of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko: As observed by Rosetta OSIRIS and VIRTIS instruments

M. Antonella Barucci; G. Filacchione; S. Fornasier; A. Raponi; J. D.P. Deshapriya; F. Tosi; C. Feller; M. Ciarniello; H. Sierks; F. Capaccioni; Antoine Pommerol; Matteo Massironi; N. Oklay; F. Merlin; Jean-Baptiste Vincent; M. Fulchignoni; A. Guilbert-Lepoutre; D. Perna; M. T. Capria; P. H. Hasselmann; B. Rousseau; Cesare Barbieri; Dominique Bockelee-Morvan; P. L. Lamy; C. De Sanctis; R. Rodrigo; S. Erard; D. Koschny; C. Leyrat; Hans Rickman

Since the orbital insertion of the Rosetta spacecraft, comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko (67P/C-G) has been mapped by OSIRIS camera and VIRTIS spectro-imager, producing a huge quantity of images and spectra of the comet’s nucleus. The aim of this work is to search for the presence of H 2 O on the nucleus which, in general, appears very dark and rich in dehydrated organic material. After selecting images of the bright spots which could be good candidates to search for H 2 O ice, taken at high resolution by OSIRIS, we check for spectral cubes of the selected coordinates to identify these spots observed by VIRTIS. Methods. The selected OSIRIS images were processed with the OSIRIS standard pipeline and corrected for the illumination condi- tions for each pixel using the Lommel-Seeliger disk law. The spots with higher I/F were selected and then analysed spectrophotomet- rically and compared with the surrounding area. We selected 13 spots as good targets to be analysed by VIRTIS to search for the 2 μm absorption band of water ice in the VIRTIS spectral cubes. Results. Out of the 13 selected bright spots, eight of them present positive H 2 O ice detection on the VIRTIS data. A spectral analysis was performed and the approximate temperature of each spot was computed. The H 2 O ice content was confirmed by modeling the spectra with mixing (areal and intimate) of H 2 O ice and dark terrain, using Hapke’s radiative transfer modeling. We also present a detailed analysis of the detected spots.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017

The highly active Anhur–Bes regions in the 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko comet: results from OSIRIS/ROSETTA observations

S. Fornasier; C. Feller; J.-C. Lee; Sabrina Ferrari; Matteo Massironi; P. H. Hasselmann; J. D. P. Deshapriya; M. A. Barucci; M. R. El-Maarry; Lorenza Giacomini; S. Mottola; H. U. Keller; Wing-Huen Ip; Z.-Y. Lin; H. Sierks; Cesare Barbieri; P. L. Lamy; R. Rodrigo; D. Koschny; Hans Rickman; Jessica Agarwal; Michael F. A'Hearn; I. Bertini; G. Cremonese; Vania Da Deppo; B. Davidsson; Stefano Debei; Mariolino De Cecco; J. Deller; M. Fulle

The Southern hemisphere of the 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko comet has become visible from Rosetta only since 2015 March. It was illuminated during the perihelion passage and therefore it contains the regions that experienced the strongest heating and erosion rates, thus exposing the sub-surface most pristine material. In this work we investigate, thanks to the OSIRIS images, the geomorphology, the spectrophotometry and some transient events of two Southern hemisphere regions: Anhur and part of Bes. Bes is dominated by outcropping consolidated terrain covered with fine particle deposits, while Anhur appears strongly eroded with elongated canyon-like structures, scarp retreats, different kinds of deposits and degraded sequences of strata indicating a pervasive layering. We discovered a new 140 m long and 10 m high scarp formed in the Anhur–Bes boundary during/after the perihelion passage, close to the area where exposed CO2 and H2O ices were previously detected. Several jets have been observed originating from these regions, including the strong perihelion outburst, an active pit and a faint optically thick dust plume. We identify several areas with a relatively bluer slope (i.e. a lower spectral slope value) than their surroundings, indicating a surface composition enriched with some water ice. These spectrally bluer areas are observed especially in talus and gravitational accumulation deposits where freshly exposed material had fallen from nearby scarps and cliffs. The investigated regions become spectrally redder beyond 2 au outbound when the dust mantle became thicker, masking the underlying ice-rich layers.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016

Decimetre-scaled spectrophotometric properties of the nucleus of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko from OSIRIS observations

C. Feller; S. Fornasier; P. H. Hasselmann; Antonella M. Barucci; Frank Preusker; Frank Scholten; L. Jorda; Antoine Pommerol; Bernhard Jost; Olivier Poch; M. R. ElMaary; Nicolas Thomas; I.N. Belskaya; M. Pajola; H. Sierks; Cesare Barbieri; P. L. Lamy; D. Koschny; Hans Rickman; R. Rodrigo; Jessica Agarwal; Michael F. A’Hearn; J.-L. Bertaux; I. Bertini; S. Boudreault; G. Cremonese; V. Da Deppo; B. Davidsson; Stefano Debei; M. De Cecco

We present the results of the photometric and spectrophotometric properties of the 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko nucleus derived with the Optical, Spectroscopic and Infrared Remote Imaging System instrument during the closest fly-by over the comet, which took place on 2015 February 14 at a distance of ∼6 km from the surface. Several images covering the 0°–33° phase angle range were acquired, and the spatial resolution achieved was 11 cm pixel−1. The flown-by region is located on the big lobe of the comet, near the borders of the Ash, Apis and Imhotep regions. Our analysis shows that this region features local heterogeneities at the decimetre scale. We observed difference of reflectance up to 40 per cent between bright spots and sombre regions, and spectral slope variations up to 50 per cent. The spectral reddening effect observed globally on the comet surface by Fornasier et al. (2015) is also observed locally on this region, but with a less steep behaviour. We note that numerous metre-sized boulders, which exhibit a smaller opposition effect, also appear spectrally redder than their surroundings. In this region, we found no evidence linking observed bright spots to exposed water-ice-rich material. We fitted our data set using the Hapke 2008 photometric model. The region overflown is globally as dark as the whole nucleus (geometric albedo of 6.8 per cent) and it has a high porosity value in the uppermost layers (86 per cent). These results of the photometric analysis at a decimetre scale indicate that the photometric properties of the flown-by region are similar to those previously found for the whole nucleus.


Planetary and Space Science | 2017

Distance determination method of dust particles using Rosetta OSIRIS NAC and WAC data

E. Drolshagen; T. Ott; D. Koschny; C. Güttler; C. Tubiana; Jessica Agarwal; H. Sierks; Cesare Barbieri; Patricia Lamy; R. Rodrigo; Hans Rickman; Michael F. A'Hearn; M. A. Barucci; J.-L. Bertaux; I. Bertini; G. Cremonese; V. Da Deppo; B. Davidsson; Stefano Debei; M. De Cecco; J. Deller; C. Feller; S. Fornasier; M. Fulle; A. Gicquel; Olivier Groussin; Pedro J. Gutierrez; M. Hofmann; S. F. Hviid; Wing-Huen Ip

The ESA Rosetta spacecraft has been tracking its target, the Jupiter-family comet 67 P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, in close vicinity for over two years. It hosts the OSIRIS instruments: the Optical, Spectroscopic, and Infrared Remote Imaging System composed of two cameras, see e.g. Keller et al. (2007). In some imaging sequences dedicated to observe dust particles in the comets coma, the two cameras took images at the same time. The aim of this work is to use these simultaneous double camera observations to calculate the dust particles’ distance to the spacecraft. As the two cameras are mounted on the spacecraft with an offset of 70 cm, the distance of particles observed by both cameras can be determined by a shift of the particles’ apparent trails on the images. This paper presents first results of the ongoing work, introducing the distance determination method for the OSIRIS instrument and the analysis of an example particle. We note that this method works for particles in the range of about 500 m – 6000 m from the spacecraft.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2017

Multivariate statistical analysis of OSIRIS/Rosetta spectrophotometric data of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko

D. Perna; Marcello Fulchignoni; Maria Antonietta Barucci; S. Fornasier; C. Feller; Prasanna Deshapriya; P. H. Hasselmann; Holder Sierks; Cesare Barbieri; P. L. Lamy; R. Rodrigo; D. Koschny; Hans Rickman; Michael F. A'Hearn; I. Bertini; G. Cremonese; Vania Da Deppo; B. Davidsson; Stefano Debei; J. Deller; Mariolino De Cecco; M. R. El-Maarry; M. Fulle; Olivier Groussin; Pedro J. Gutierrez; C. Güttler; M. Hofmann; S. F. Hviid; Wing-Huen Ip; L. Jorda

The ESA Rosetta mission explored comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko in 2014-2016, following its target before and after the perihelion passage on 13 August 2015. The NAC camera of the OSIRIS imaging system allowed to map the nucleus surface acquiring images with different filters in the visible wavelength range. Here we study the spectrophotometric behaviour of the nucleus by a multivariate statistical analysis, aiming to distinguish homogeneous groups and to constrain the bulk composition. We applied the G-mode clustering algorithm to 16 OSIRIS data cubes acquired on 5-6 August 2014 (mostly covering the northern hemisphere) and 2 May 2015 (mostly covering the southern hemisphere), selected to have complete coverage of the comet’s surface with similar observing conditions. We found four similar homogeneous groups for each of the analysed cubes. The first group corresponds to the average spectrophotometric behaviour of the nucleus. The second (spectrally redder) and the third (spectrally bluer) groups are found in regions that were already found to deviate from the average terrain of the comet by previous studies. A fourth group (characterised by enhancements of the flux at 700-750 nm and 989 nm, possibly due to H 2 O + and/or NH 2 emissions) seems connected with the cometary activity rather than with the bulk composition. While our aim in this work was to study the spectrophotometric behaviour of the nucleus of 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko as a whole, we found that a follow-up application of the G-mode to smaller regions of the surface could be useful in particular to identify and study the temporal evolution of ice patches, as well as to constrain the composition and physical processes behind the emission of dust jets.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2018

Exposed bright features on the comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko: distribution and evolution

J. D. P. Deshapriya; M. A. Barucci; S. Fornasier; P. H. Hasselmann; C. Feller; H. Sierks; Alice Lucchetti; M. Pajola; N. Oklay; S. Mottola; N. Masoumzadeh; C. Tubiana; C. Güttler; Cesare Barbieri; P. L. Lamy; R. Rodrigo; D. Koschny; Hans Rickman; J.-L. Bertaux; I. Bertini; D. Bodewits; S. Boudreault; G. Cremonese; V. Da Deppo; B. Davidsson; Stefano Debei; M. De Cecco; J. Deller; M. Fulle; Olivier Groussin

Context. Since its arrival at the comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko in August 2014, the Rosetta spacecraft followed the comet as it went past the perihelion and beyond until September 2016. During this time there were many scientific instruments operating on board Rosetta to study the comet and its evolution in unprecedented detail. In this context, our study focusses on the distribution and evolution of exposed bright features that have been observed by OSIRIS, which is the scientific imaging instrument aboard Rosetta. Aims. We envisage investigating various morphologies of exposed bright features and the mechanisms that triggered their appearance. Methods. We co-registered multi-filter observations of OSIRIS images that are available in reflectance. The Lommel–Seeliger disk function was used to correct for the illumination conditions and the resulting colour cubes were used to perform spectrophotometric analyses on regions of interest. Results. We present a catalogue of 57 exposed bright features observed on the nucleus of the comet, all of which are attributed to the presence of H2O ice on the comet. Furthermore, we categorise these patches under four different morphologies and present geometric albedos for each category. Conclusions. Although the nucleus of 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko appears to be dark in general, there are localised H2O ice sources on the comet. Cometary activity escalates towards the perihelion passage and reveals such volatile ices. We propose that isolated H2O ice patches found in smooth terrains in regions, such as Imhotep, Bes, and Hapi, result from frost as an aftermath of the cessation of the diurnal water cycle on the comet as it recedes from perihelion. Upon the comet’s return to perihelion, such patches are revealed when sublimation-driven erosion removes the thin dust layers that got deposited earlier. More powerful activity sources such as cometary outbursts are capable of revealing much fresher, less contaminated H2O ice that is preserved with consolidated cometary material, as observed on exposed patches resting on boulders. This is corroborated by our albedo calculations that attribute higher albedos for bright features with formations related to outbursts.


Nature Astronomy | 2017

The pristine interior of comet 67P revealed by the combined Aswan outburst and cliff collapse

M. Pajola; S. Höfner; Jean-Baptiste Vincent; N. Oklay; Frank Scholten; Frank Preusker; S. Mottola; Giampiero Naletto; S. Fornasier; S. C. Lowry; C. Feller; P. H. Hasselmann; C. Güttler; C. Tubiana; H. Sierks; Cesare Barbieri; P. L. Lamy; R. Rodrigo; D. Koschny; Hans Rickman; H. U. Keller; Jessica Agarwal; Michael F. A’Hearn; M. A. Barucci; J.-L. Bertaux; I. Bertini; Sebastien Besse; S. Boudreault; G. Cremonese; V. Da Deppo

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S. Fornasier

PSL Research University

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R. Rodrigo

Spanish National Research Council

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D. Koschny

European Space Research and Technology Centre

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P. L. Lamy

Aix-Marseille University

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