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Space Science Reviews | 1986

The comet Halley dust and gas environment

Neil Divine; H. Fechtig; Tamas I. Gombosi; Martha S. Hanner; H. U. Keller; S. M. Larson; D. A. Mendis; Ray L. Newburn; R. Reinhard; Zdenek Sekanina; D. K. Yeomans

Quantitative descriptions of environments near the nucleus of comet P/Halley have been developed to support spacecraft and mission design for the flyby encounters in March, 1986. To summarize these models as they exist just before the encounters, we review the relevant data from prior Halley apparitions and from recent cometary research. Orbital elements, visual magnitudes, and parameter values and analysis for the nucleus, gas and dust are combined to predict Halleys position, production rates, gas and dust distributions, and electromagnetic radiation field for the current perihelion passage. The predicted numerical results have been useful for estimating likely spacecraft effects, such as impact damage and attitude perturbation. Sample applications are cited, including design of a dust shield for spacecraft structure, and threshold and dynamic range selection for flight experiments. We expect that the comets activity may be more irregular than these smoothly varying models predict, and that comparison with the flyby data will be instructive.


The Astronomical Journal | 1989

Infrared photometry of comet Wilson (1986l) at two epochs

Martha S. Hanner; Ray L. Newburn

1-20 micron filter photometry of comet Wilson (1986l) was obtained on May 29 - June 2, 1987 (r = 1.36 AU) and January 11 -14, 1988 (r = 3.75 AU) at the NASA Infrared Telescope Facility. The thermal emission at 1.36 AU has been fit with a model for a size distribution of small absorbing grains; the size and the optical properties of the dust (color, albedo, and thermal emission spectrum) appear typical of short period comets at similar r. No 10 micron silicate feature was evident. The dust-production rate on June 1 was about 5 x 10 to the 5th g/s. The geometric albedo of comet Wilson at r = 3.75 AU appears to be higher than that of comets measured at smaller r, after phase effects have been accounted for. Such albedos seem typical of comets at larger heliocentric distances. 41 references.


The Astronomical Journal | 1987

Comet Sugano-Saigusa-Fujikawa (1983V) - A small, puzzling comet

Martha S. Hanner; Ray L. Newburn; Hyron Spinrad; Veeder Gj

Spectroscopic and infrared observations of Comet Sugano-Saigusa-Fujikawa (1983V) were obtained during its close approach to the Earth on 11-14 June 1983. The [O I] production rates of 1.8 +/- 0.9 x 10(26) atoms/s observed on 12.3 June and 7 +/- 3.5 x 10(26) atoms/s on 13.4 June lead to derived water-production rates of 3 x 10(27) mol/s on 12 June and 1.1 x 10(28) mol/s on 13 June. The abundances of the minor species NH2, CN, C2, and C3 are unusually low relative to [O I]. The upper limit to the average nuclear radius from our infrared and visual photometry on 12-13 June (assuming that the entire signal came from the nucleus) is approximately 370 m. The dust/gas mass ratio was <0.01 on June 12 and <0.005 on June 13.


Nature | 1999

Does global warming make Triton blush

Bonnie J. Buratti; Michael D. Hicks; Ray L. Newburn

Neptunes largest moon, Triton, is one of two satellites in the Solar System that are currently geologically active. At least two geyser-like plumes were observed by the Voyager 2 spacecraft in 1989, and dozens of streaky deposits hint at the existence of many more. Triton also exhibits complex seasonal changes in its 165-year journey about the Sun. Because Tritons atmosphere transports volatiles (primarily nitrogen and methane) during this seasonal cycle, its atmospheric pressure may fluctuate by up to an order of magnitude over decades. Photometric measurements of its albedo and colour over half a century show that seasonal volatile transport has occurred. There have also been indications that more extreme, short-lived changes, perhaps due to geological events, have occurred on Triton. An anomalously red spectrum was reported for Triton in 1977 (refs 5, 6), and global warming has now been observed.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2003

Phase curve and albedo of asteroid 5535 Annefrank

Ray L. Newburn; Thomas C. Duxbury; Martha S. Hanner; Boris V. Semenov; Edward Hirst; Ramachand S. Bhat; Shyamkumar Bhaskaran; Tseng‐Chan M. Wang; Peter Tsou; D. E. Brownlee; Allan R. Cheuvront; David E. Gingerich; Gregory R. Bollendonk; Joseph M. Vellinga; Kelly A. Parham; Susan J. Mumaw

Seventy-two images of the S-class asteroid 5535 Annefrank, acquired on 2 November 2002 at target ranges of 11,415??8.5 km, were transmitted to Earth as a part of an engineering readiness test of the Stardust mission. Forty-four of these were used to create a phase curve extending to 134, the largest angle yet achieved for any S-class asteroid. Flux fell by more than six magnitudes between the extrapolated 0 and 134. A maximum illuminated cross section of 16 km2 was seen at a phase angle of 47.2. Assuming a camera efficiency of 75%, a broadband (470?? nm) geometric albedo of 0.24 was derived for Annefrank.


Advances in Space Research | 1984

A new calibration of the semi-empirical photometric theory for Halley and other comets

Ray L. Newburn

Abstract A massive new body of data, comprised of spectrophotometry of 17 comets by Newburn and Spinrad, has now become available for calibration of the basic theory, the Semi-Empirical Photometric Theory, used for modelling of Comet Halley. A redetermination of the constant R and the function δ has been made, and no change is needed. Improved mixing ratios given as a function of heliocentric distance also permit an improvement in the constants of the visual photometric model presented at COSPAR XXIV. A new light curve for Halley and a lower dust to gas ratio prove to make roughly compensating changes in dust densities.


Advances in Space Research | 1982

The derivation of Halley parameters from observations

Ray L. Newburn; R. Reinhard

Abstract A set of nominal model parameters for P/Halley is derived from its light curve and spectra. In those cases where Halley observations are not sufficient, the average value derived from a large set of other comets has been used, or data from comet Bennett, Halleys best analogue has been taken. The derived parameters include nucleus mass, size, density, albedo, rotation period, axial inclination, and surface temperature, the composition of the parent molecules, the total gas and dust production rates, distributions for the dust size and bulk density as well as various other parameters.


Science | 2004

Surface of Young Jupiter Family Comet 81P/Wild 2: View from the Stardust Spacecraft

D. E. Brownlee; Friedrich Hörz; Ray L. Newburn; Michael E. Zolensky; Thomas C. Duxbury; Scott A. Sandford; Zdenek Sekanina; Peter Tsou; Martha S. Hanner; Benton C. Clark; Simon F. Green; J. Kissel


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2003

Stardust: Comet and interstellar dust sample return mission

D. E. Brownlee; Peter Tsou; John D. Anderson; Martha S. Hanner; Ray L. Newburn; Zdenek Sekanina; B. C. Clark; Friedrich Hörz; Michael E. Zolensky; J. Kissel; J. A. M. McDonnell; Scott A. Sandford; Anthony J. Tuzzolino


The Astronomical Journal | 1989

Spectrophotometry of 25 comets - Post-Halley updates for 17 comets plus new observations for eight additional comets

Ray L. Newburn; Hyron Spinrad

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Martha S. Hanner

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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D. E. Brownlee

University of Washington

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Thomas C. Duxbury

California Institute of Technology

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Zdenek Sekanina

California Institute of Technology

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Friedrich Hörz

Planetary Science Institute

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Peter Tsou

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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