Jouni Rynö
Finnish Meteorological Institute
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Featured researches published by Jouni Rynö.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2016
Martin Hilchenbach; J. Kissel; Yves Langevin; Christelle Briois; H. von Hoerner; Andreas Koch; R. Schulz; Johan Silen; Kathrin Altwegg; L. Colangeli; H. Cottin; C. Engrand; Henning Fischer; Albrecht Glasmachers; E. Grün; Gerhard Haerendel; H. Henkel; H. Höfner; Klaus Hornung; Elmar K. Jessberger; Harry J. Lehto; Kirsi Lehto; F. Raulin; L. Le Roy; Jouni Rynö; W. Steiger; Thomas G. Stephan; Laurent Thirkell; R. Thomas; K. Torkar
The COmetary Secondary Ion Mass Analyser instrument on board ESAs Rosetta mission has collected dust particles in the coma of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. During the early-orbit phase of the Rosetta mission, particles and particle agglomerates have been imaged and analyzed in the inner coma at distances between 100 km and 10 km off the cometary nucleus and at more than 3 AU from the Sun. We identified 585 particles of more than 14 μm in size. The particles are collected at low impact speeds and constitute a sample of the dust particles in the inner coma impacting and fragmenting on the targets. The sizes of the particles range from 14 μm up to sub-millimeter sizes and the differential dust flux size distribution is fitted with a power law exponent of -3.1. After impact, the larger particles tend to stick together, spread out or consist of single or a group of clumps, and the flocculent morphology of the fragmented particles is revealed. The elemental composition of the dust particles is heterogeneous and the particles could contain typical silicates like olivine and pyroxenes, as well as iron sulfides. The sodium to iron elemental ratio is enriched with regard to abundances in CI carbonaceous chondrites by a factor from ˜1.5 to ˜15. No clear evidence for organic matter has been identified. The composition and morphology of the collected dust particles appear to be similar to that of interplanetary dust particles.
Nature | 2016
Nicolas Fray; Anais Bardyn; H. Cottin; Kathrin Altwegg; Donia Baklouti; Christelle Briois; L. Colangeli; C. Engrand; Henning Fischer; Albrecht Glasmachers; E. Grün; Gerhard Haerendel; Hartmut Henkel; H. Höfner; Klaus Hornung; Elmar K. Jessberger; Andreas Koch; Harald Krüger; Yves Langevin; Harry J. Lehto; Kirsi Lehto; Léna Le Roy; S. Merouane; Paola Modica; F.-R. Orthous-Daunay; John Paquette; F. Raulin; Jouni Rynö; R. Schulz; Johan Silen
The presence of solid carbonaceous matter in cometary dust was established by the detection of elements such as carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen in particles from comet 1P/Halley. Such matter is generally thought to have originated in the interstellar medium, but it might have formed in the solar nebula—the cloud of gas and dust that was left over after the Sun formed. This solid carbonaceous material cannot be observed from Earth, so it has eluded unambiguous characterization. Many gaseous organic molecules, however, have been observed; they come mostly from the sublimation of ices at the surface or in the subsurface of cometary nuclei. These ices could have been formed from material inherited from the interstellar medium that suffered little processing in the solar nebula. Here we report the in situ detection of solid organic matter in the dust particles emitted by comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko; the carbon in this organic material is bound in very large macromolecular compounds, analogous to the insoluble organic matter found in the carbonaceous chondrite meteorites. The organic matter in meteorites might have formed in the interstellar medium and/or the solar nebula, but was almost certainly modified in the meteorites’ parent bodies. We conclude that the observed cometary carbonaceous solid matter could have the same origin as the meteoritic insoluble organic matter, but suffered less modification before and/or after being incorporated into the comet.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016
S. Merouane; B. Zaprudin; Oliver Stenzel; Y. Langevin; Nicolas Altobelli; Vincenzo Della Corte; Henning Fischer; M. Fulle; Klaus Hornung; Johan Silen; Nicolas Ligier; Alessandra Rotundi; Jouni Rynö; R. Schulz; Martin Hilchenbach; J. Kissel
Context. The COmetary Secondary Ion Mass Analyzer (COSIMA) on board Rosetta is dedicated to the collection and compositional analysis of the dust particles in the coma of 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko (67P). Aims. Investigation of the physical properties of the dust particles collected along the comet trajectory around the Sun starting at a heliocentric distance of 3.5 AU. Methods. The flux, size distribution, and morphology of the dust particles collected in the vicinity of the nucleus of comet 67P were measured with a daily to weekly time resolution. Results. The particles collected by COSIMA can be classified according to their morphology into two main types: compact particles and porous aggregates. In low-resolution images, the porous material appears similar to the chondritic-porous interplanetary dust particles collected in Earth’s stratosphere in terms of texture. We show that this porous material represents 75% in volume and 50% in number of the large dust particles collected by COSIMA. Compact particles have typical sizes from a few tens of microns to a few hundreds of microns, while porous aggregates can be as large as a millimeter. The particles are not collected as a continuous flow but appear in bursts. This could be due to limited time resolution and/or fragmentation either in the collection funnel or few meters away from the spacecraft. The average collection rate of dust particles as a function of nucleo-centric distance shows that, at high phase angle, the dust flux follows a 1/ d 2 comet law, excluding fragmentation of the dust particles along their journey to the spacecraft. At low phase angle, the dust flux is much more dispersed compared to the 1/ d 2 comet law but cannot be explained by fragmentation of the particles along their trajectory since their velocity, indirectly deduced from the COSIMA data, does not support such a phenomenon. The cumulative size distribution of particles larger than 150 μ m follows a power law close to r − 0.8 ± 0.1 , confirming measurements made by another Rosetta dust instrument Grain Impact Analyser and Dust Accumulator (GIADA). The cumulative size distribution of particles between 30 μ m and 150 μ m has a power index of −1.9 ± 0.3. The excess of dust in the 10–100 μ m range in comparison to the 100 μ m–1 mm range together with no evidence for fragmentation in the inner coma, implies that these particles could have been released or fragmented at the nucleus right after lift-off of larger particles. Below 30 μ m, particles exhibit a flat size distribution. We interprete this knee in the size distribution at small sizes as the consequence of strong binding forces between the sub-constitutents. For aggregates smaller than 30 μ m, forces stronger than Van-der-Waals forces would be needed to break them apart.
Planetary and Space Science | 2015
Harald Krüger; Thomas G. Stephan; C. Engrand; Christelle Briois; Sandra Siljeström; S. Merouane; Donia Baklouti; Henning Fischer; Nicolas Fray; Klaus Hornung; Harry J. Lehto; F.-R. Orthous-Daunay; Jouni Rynö; R. Schulz; Johan Silen; Laurent Thirkell; Mario Trieloff; Martin Hilchenbach
COSIMA (COmetary Secondary Ion Mass Analyser) is a time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometer (TOF-SIMS) on board the Rosetta space mission. COSIMA has been designed to measure the composition of cometary dust grains. It has a mass resolution m/{\Delta}m of 1400 at mass 100 u, thus enabling the discrimination of inorganic mass peaks from organic ones in the mass spectra. We have evaluated the identification capabilities of the reference model of COSIMA for inorganic compounds using a suite of terrestrial minerals that are relevant for cometary science. Ground calibration demonstrated that the performances of the flight model were similar to that of the reference model. The list of minerals used in this study was chosen based on the mineralogy of meteorites, interplanetary dust particles and Stardust samples. It contains anhydrous and hydrous ferromagnesian silicates, refractory silicates and oxides (present in meteoritic Ca-Al-rich inclusions), carbonates, and Fe-Ni sulfides. From the analyses of these minerals, we have calculated relative sensitivity factors for a suite of major and minor elements in order to provide a basis for element quantification for the possible identification of major mineral classes present in the cometary grains.
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A | 2017
Martin Hilchenbach; Henning Fischer; Yves Langevin; S. Merouane; John Paquette; Jouni Rynö; Oliver Stenzel; Christelle Briois; J. Kissel; Andreas Koch; R. Schulz; Johan Silen; Nicolas Altobelli; Donia Baklouti; Anais Bardyn; H. Cottin; C. Engrand; Nicolas Fray; Gerhard Haerendel; Hartmut Henkel; H. Höfner; Klaus Hornung; Harry J. Lehto; Eva Maria Mellado; Paola Modica; Léna Le Roy; Sandra Siljeström; W. Steiger; Laurent Thirkell; Roger Thomas
The in situ cometary dust particle instrument COSIMA (COmetary Secondary Ion Mass Analyser) onboard ESAs Rosetta mission has collected about 31 000 dust particles in the inner coma of comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko since August 2014. The particles are identified by optical microscope imaging and analysed by time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry. After dust particle collection by low speed impact on metal targets, the collected particle morphology points towards four families of cometary dust particles. COSIMA is an in situ laboratory that operates remotely controlled next to the comet nucleus. The particles can be further manipulated within the instrument by mechanical and electrostatic means after their collection by impact. The particles are stored above 0°C in the instrument and the experiments are carried out on the refractory, ice-free matter of the captured cometary dust particles. An interesting particle morphology class, the compact particles, is not fragmented on impact. One of these particles was mechanically pressed and thereby crushed into large fragments. The particles are good electrical insulators and transform into rubble pile agglomerates by the application of an energetic indium ion beam during the secondary ion mass spectrometry analysis. This article is part of the themed issue ‘Cometary science after Rosetta’.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017
Jessica Agarwal; V. Della Corte; Paul D. Feldman; B. Geiger; S. Merouane; I. Bertini; D. Bodewits; S. Fornasier; E. Grün; P. H. Hasselmann; Martin Hilchenbach; S. Höfner; S. Ivanovski; Ludmilla Kolokolova; M. Pajola; Alessandra Rotundi; H. Sierks; Andrew Joseph Steffl; Nicolas Thomas; Michael F. A'Hearn; Cesare Barbieri; M. A. Barucci; J.-L. Bertaux; S. Boudreault; G. Cremonese; V. Da Deppo; B. Davidsson; Stefano Debei; M. De Cecco; J. Deller
On 3 July 2016, several instruments on board ESA’s Rosetta spacecraft detected signs of an outburst event on comet 67P, at a heliocentric distance of 3.32 AU from the sun, outbound from perihelion. We here report on the inferred properties of the ejected dust and the surface change at the site of the outburst. The activity coincided with the local sunrise and continued over a time interval of 14 – 68 minutes. It left a 10m-sized icy patch on the surface. The ejected material comprised refractory grains of several hundred microns in size, and sub-micron-sized water ice grains. The high dust mass production rate is incompatible with the free sublimation of crystalline water ice under solar illumination as the only acceleration process. Additional energy stored near the surface must have increased the gas density. We suggest a pressurized sub-surface gas reservoir, or the crystallization of amorphous water ice as possible causes.
Nature | 2015
R. Schulz; Martin Hilchenbach; Yves Langevin; J. Kissel; Johan Silen; Christelle Briois; C. Engrand; Klaus Hornung; Donia Baklouti; Anaı̈s Bardyn; H. Cottin; Henning Fischer; Nicolas Fray; M. Godard; Harry J. Lehto; Léna Le Roy; S. Merouane; F.-R. Orthous-Daunay; John Paquette; Jouni Rynö; Sandra Siljeström; Oliver Stenzel; Laurent Thirkell; Kurt Varmuza; B. Zaprudin
Space Science Reviews | 2007
J. Kissel; Kathrin Altwegg; B. C. Clark; L. Colangeli; H. Cottin; S. Czempiel; J. Eibl; C. Engrand; H. M. Fehringer; B. Feuerbacher; M. Fomenkovao; Albrecht Glasmachers; J. M. Greenberg; E. Grün; G. Haerendel; H. Henkel; Martin Hilchenbach; H. von Hoerner; H. Höfner; Klaus Hornung; Elmar K. Jessberger; Andreas Koch; Harald Krüger; Yves Langevin; P. Parigger; F. Raulin; F. G. Rudenauer; Jouni Rynö; Erich R. Schmid; R. Schulz
Icarus | 2016
Y. Langevin; M. Hilchenbach; N. Ligier; S. Merouane; K. Hornung; C. Engrand; R. Schulz; J. Kissel; Jouni Rynö; P. Eng
Planetary and Space Science | 2016
Klaus Hornung; S. Merouane; Martin Hilchenbach; Yves Langevin; Eva Maria Mellado; Vincenzo Della Corte; J. Kissel; C. Engrand; R. Schulz; Jouni Rynö; Johan Silen