Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where S. C. Lowry is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by S. C. Lowry.


Science | 2015

Dust measurements in the coma of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko inbound to the Sun

Alessandra Rotundi; H. Sierks; Vincenzo Della Corte; M. Fulle; Pedro J. Gutierrez; Luisa M. Lara; Cesare Barbieri; P. L. Lamy; R. Rodrigo; D. Koschny; Hans Rickman; H. U. Keller; José Juan López-Moreno; Mario Accolla; Jessica Agarwal; Michael F. A’Hearn; Nicolas Altobelli; F. Angrilli; M. Antonietta Barucci; Jean-Loup Bertaux; I. Bertini; D. Bodewits; E. Bussoletti; L. Colangeli; Massimo Cosi; G. Cremonese; J.-F. Crifo; Vania Da Deppo; B. Davidsson; Stefano Debei

Critical measurements for understanding accretion and the dust/gas ratio in the solar nebula, where planets were forming 4.5 billion years ago, are being obtained by the GIADA (Grain Impact Analyser and Dust Accumulator) experiment on the European Space Agency’s Rosetta spacecraft orbiting comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. Between 3.6 and 3.4 astronomical units inbound, GIADA and OSIRIS (Optical, Spectroscopic, and Infrared Remote Imaging System) detected 35 outflowing grains of mass 10−10 to 10−7 kilograms, and 48 grains of mass 10−5 to 10−2 kilograms, respectively. Combined with gas data from the MIRO (Microwave Instrument for the Rosetta Orbiter) and ROSINA (Rosetta Orbiter Spectrometer for Ion and Neutral Analysis) instruments, we find a dust/gas mass ratio of 4 ± 2 averaged over the sunlit nucleus surface. A cloud of larger grains also encircles the nucleus in bound orbits from the previous perihelion. The largest orbiting clumps are meter-sized, confirming the dust/gas ratio of 3 inferred at perihelion from models of dust comae and trails.


Nature | 2015

Large heterogeneities in comet 67P as revealed by active pits from sinkhole collapse

Jean-Baptiste Vincent; D. Bodewits; Sebastien Besse; H. Sierks; Cesare Barbieri; P. L. Lamy; R. Rodrigo; D. Koschny; Hans Rickman; H. U. Keller; Jessica Agarwal; Michael F. A'Hearn; Anne-Thérèse Auger; M. Antonella Barucci; Ivano Bertini; Claire Capanna; G. Cremonese; Vania Da Deppo; Bjoern Davidsson; Stefano Debei; Mariolino De Cecco; M. R. El-Maarry; Francesca Ferri; S. Fornasier; M. Fulle; Robert W. Gaskell; Lorenza Giacomini; Olivier Groussin; A. Guilbert-Lepoutre; Pablo Gutierrez-Marques

Pits have been observed on many cometary nuclei mapped by spacecraft. It has been argued that cometary pits are a signature of endogenic activity, rather than impact craters such as those on planetary and asteroid surfaces. Impact experiments and models cannot reproduce the shapes of most of the observed cometary pits, and the predicted collision rates imply that few of the pits are related to impacts. Alternative mechanisms like explosive activity have been suggested, but the driving process remains unknown. Here we report that pits on comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko are active, and probably created by a sinkhole process, possibly accompanied by outbursts. We argue that after formation, pits expand slowly in diameter, owing to sublimation-driven retreat of the walls. Therefore, pits characterize how eroded the surface is: a fresh cometary surface will have a ragged structure with many pits, while an evolved surface will look smoother. The size and spatial distribution of pits imply that large heterogeneities exist in the physical, structural or compositional properties of the first few hundred metres below the current nucleus surface.


Science | 2010

E-type Asteroid (2867) Steins as Imaged by OSIRIS on Board Rosetta

H. U. Keller; Cesare Barbieri; D. Koschny; P. L. Lamy; Hans Rickman; R. Rodrigo; H. Sierks; Michael F. A'Hearn; F. Angrilli; M. A. Barucci; G. Cremonese; V. Da Deppo; B. Davidsson; M. De Cecco; Stefano Debei; S. Fornasier; M. Fulle; Olivier Groussin; Pedro J. Gutierrez; S. F. Hviid; Wing-Huen Ip; L. Jorda; J. Knollenberg; J.-R. Kramm; E. Kührt; M. Küppers; L. M. Lara; M. Lazzarin; J. J. Lopez Moreno; Francesco Marzari

Smooth Space Pebble In September 2008, on its way to meet comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, the Rosetta spacecraft flew by asteroid Steins, a member of a very rare class of asteroids that had never been observed closely by spacecraft. Keller et al. (p. 190) analyzed the images to generate a reconstruction of the asteroids shape. Steins is oblate with an effective spherical diameter of 5.3 kilometers, and it lacks small craters, which may have been erased by surface reshaping. Indeed, Steinss shape resembles that of a body that was spun-up by the YORP effect—a torque produced by incident sunlight, which can alter the rotation rate of a small body—that causes material to slide toward the equator. This effect may have produced Steinss distinctive diamond-like shape. Incident sunlight probably caused this asteroid to spin, which redistributed its mass and smoothed its surface. The European Space Agency’s Rosetta mission encountered the main-belt asteroid (2867) Steins while on its way to rendezvous with comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. Images taken with the OSIRIS (optical, spectroscopic, and infrared remote imaging system) cameras on board Rosetta show that Steins is an oblate body with an effective spherical diameter of 5.3 kilometers. Its surface does not show color variations. The morphology of Steins is dominated by linear faults and a large 2.1-kilometer-diameter crater near its south pole. Crater counts reveal a distinct lack of small craters. Steins is not solid rock but a rubble pile and has a conical appearance that is probably the result of reshaping due to Yarkovsky-O’Keefe-Radzievskii-Paddack (YORP) spin-up. The OSIRIS images constitute direct evidence for the YORP effect on a main-belt asteroid.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2011

The size distribution of Jupiter Family comet nuclei

C. Snodgrass; A. Fitzsimmons; S. C. Lowry; Paul R. Weissman

We present an updated cumulative size distribution (CSD) for Jupiter Family comet (JFC) nuclei, including a rigorous assessment of the uncertainty on the slope of the CSD. The CSD is expressed as a power law, N(>rN) ∝r−qN, where rN is the radius of the nuclei and q is the slope. We include a large number of optical observations published by us and others since the comprehensive review in the Comets II book, and make use of an improved fitting method. We assess the uncertainty on the CSD due to all of the unknowns and uncertainties involved (photometric uncertainty, assumed phase function, albedo and shape of the nucleus) by means of Monte Carlo simulations. In order to do this we also briefly review the current measurements of these parameters for JFCs. Our final CSD has a slope q= 1.92 ± 0.20 for nuclei with radius rN≥ 1.25 km.


Nature | 2010

A collision in 2009 as the origin of the debris trail of asteroid P/2010 A2

C. Snodgrass; C. Tubiana; Jean-Baptiste Vincent; H. Sierks; S. F. Hviid; Richard Moissl; Hermann Boehnhardt; Cesare Barbieri; D. Koschny; P. L. Lamy; Hans Rickman; R. Rodrigo; B. Carry; S. C. Lowry; Ryan J. M. Laird; Paul R. Weissman; A. Fitzsimmons; S. Marchi

The peculiar object P/2010 A2 was discovered in January 2010 and given a cometary designation because of the presence of a trail of material, although there was no central condensation or coma. The appearance of this object, in an asteroidal orbit (small eccentricity and inclination) in the inner main asteroid belt attracted attention as a potential new member of the recently recognized class of main-belt comets. If confirmed, this new object would expand the range in heliocentric distance over which main-belt comets are found. Here we report observations of P/2010 A2 by the Rosetta spacecraft. We conclude that the trail arose from a single event, rather than a period of cometary activity, in agreement with independent results. The trail is made up of relatively large particles of millimetre to centimetre size that remain close to the parent asteroid. The shape of the trail can be explained by an initial impact ejecting large clumps of debris that disintegrated and dispersed almost immediately. We determine that this was an asteroid collision that occurred around 10 February 2009.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2001

CCD photometry of distant comets

S. C. Lowry; A. Fitzsimmons

R band CCD photometric observations of short period Jupiter family comets in the heliocentric region of 2.11 AU Rh 5:63 AU were performed using the 4.2 m William Herschel Telescope on La Palma in December 1998. 22 comets were targeted, including the comet-asteroid transition object 49P/Arend{Rigaux. Out of a total of ten detected comets, six were seen to display substantial outgassing (48P, 65P, 74P, 103P, 128P, and 139P), with the remaining four comets (7P, 9P, 22P, and 49P) being stellar in appearance. Nuclear radius measurements and relative dust production rates in terms of Af were measured for these comets, along with upper limits for the remaining twelve undetected comets (6P, 44P, 51P, 54P, 57P, 63P, 71P, 73P, 79P, 86P, 87P, and 100P). The inactive comets had nuclear radii in the range 1.8 km rN 4:4 km, while upper limits for the active and undetected comets (assuming they all lay within the eld of view) were between 0.6 km and 12.7 km, for an assumed albedo of 0.04. Even if one applies the previously measured maximum axis ratio of 2.6:1 and the minimum measured albedo of 0.02 to the undetected comets, their projected semi-major axes are all constrained to below 8 km. For the active comets, photometric proles of their dust comae were measured and are consistent with those of steady state coma models.


Nature | 2015

Two independent and primitive envelopes of the bilobate nucleus of comet 67P

Matteo Massironi; E. Simioni; Francesco Marzari; G. Cremonese; Lorenza Giacomini; M. Pajola; L. Jorda; Giampiero Naletto; S. C. Lowry; M. R. El-Maarry; Frank Preusker; Frank Scholten; H. Sierks; Cesare Barbieri; P. L. Lamy; R. Rodrigo; D. Koschny; Hans Rickman; H. U. Keller; Michael F. A'Hearn; Jessica Agarwal; Anne-Thérèse Auger; M. Antonella Barucci; Bertini Ivano; Sebastien Besse; D. Bodewits; Claire Capanna; Vania Da Deppo; B. Davidsson; Stefano Debei

The factors shaping cometary nuclei are still largely unknown, but could be the result of concurrent effects of evolutionary and primordial processes. The peculiar bilobed shape of comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko may be the result of the fusion of two objects that were once separate or the result of a localized excavation by outgassing at the interface between the two lobes. Here we report that the comet’s major lobe is enveloped by a nearly continuous set of strata, up to 650 metres thick, which are independent of an analogous stratified envelope on the minor lobe. Gravity vectors computed for the two lobes separately are closer to perpendicular to the strata than those calculated for the entire nucleus and adjacent to the neck separating the two lobes. Therefore comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko is an accreted body of two distinct objects with ‘onion-like’ stratification, which formed before they merged. We conclude that gentle, low-velocity collisions occurred between two fully formed kilometre-sized cometesimals in the early stages of the Solar System. The notable structural similarities between the two lobes of comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko indicate that the early-forming cometesimals experienced similar primordial stratified accretion, even though they formed independently.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2015

OSIRIS observations of meter-sized exposures of H2O ice at the surface of 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko and interpretation using laboratory experiments

Antoine Pommerol; Nicholas Thomas; M. R. El-Maarry; M. Pajola; Olivier Groussin; Anne-Thérèse Auger; N. Oklay; S. Fornasier; C. Feller; B. Davidsson; A. Gracia-Berná; Bernhard Jost; R. Marschall; Olivier Poch; M. A. Barucci; F. La Forgia; H. U. Keller; E. Kührt; S. C. Lowry; S. Mottola; Giampiero Naletto; H. Sierks; Cesare Barbieri; P. L. Lamy; R. Rodrigo; D. Koschny; Hans Rickman; Jessica Agarwal; Michael F. A’Hearn; I. Bertini

Since OSIRIS started acquiring high-resolution observations of the surface of the nucleus of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, over one hundred meter-sized bright spots have been identified in numerous types of geomorphologic regions, but mostly located in areas receiving low insolation. The bright spots are either clustered, in debris fields close to decameter-high cliffs, or isolated without structural relation to the surrounding terrain. They can be up to ten times brighter than the average surface of the comet at visible wavelengths and display a significantly bluer spectrum. They do not exhibit significant changes over a period of a few weeks. All these observations are consistent with exposure of water ice at the surface of boulders produced by dislocation of the weakly consolidated layers that cover large areas of the nucleus. Laboratory experiments show that under simulated comet surface conditions, analog samples acquire a vertical stratification with an uppermost porous mantle of refractory dust overlaying a layer of hard ice formed by recondensation or sintering under the insulating dust mantle. The evolution of the visible spectrophotometric properties of samples during sublimation is consistent with the contrasts of brightness and color seen at the surface of the nucleus. Clustered bright spots are formed by the collapse of overhangs that is triggered by mass wasting of deeper layers. Isolated spots might be the result of the emission of boulders at low velocity that are redepositioned in other regions.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016

Are fractured cliffs the source of cometary dust jets ? insights from OSIRIS/Rosetta at 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko

Jean-Baptiste Vincent; N. Oklay; M. Pajola; S. Höfner; H. Sierks; X. Hu; Cesare Barbieri; P. L. Lamy; R. Rodrigo; D. Koschny; Hans Rickman; H. U. Keller; Michael F. A'Hearn; Maria Antonietta Barucci; I. Bertini; Sebastien Besse; D. Bodewits; G. Cremonese; Vania Da Deppo; B. Davidsson; Stefano Debei; M. De Cecco; M. R. El-Maarry; S. Fornasier; M. Fulle; Olivier Groussin; Pedro J. Gutierrez; P. Gutiérrez-Marquez; C. Güttler; M. Hofmann

Dust jets (i.e., fuzzy collimated streams of cometary material arising from the nucleus) have been observed in situ on all comets since the Giotto mission flew by comet 1P/Halley in 1986, and yet their formation mechanism remains unknown. Several solutions have been proposed involving either specific properties of the active areas or the local topography to create and focus the gas and dust flows. While the nucleus morphology seems to be responsible for the larger features, high resolution imagery has shown that broad streams are composed of many smaller jets (a few meters wide) that connect directly to the nucleus surface. Aims. We monitored these jets at high resolution and over several months to understand what the physical processes are that drive their formation and how this affects the surface. Methods. Using many images of the same areas with different viewing angles, we performed a 3-dimensional reconstruction of collimated jets and linked them precisely to their sources on the nucleus. Results. We show here observational evidence that the northern hemisphere jets of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko arise from areas with sharp topographic changes and describe the physical processes involved. We propose a model in which active cliffs are the main source of jet-like features and therefore of the regions eroding the fastest on comets. We suggest that this is a common mechanism taking place on all comets.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2014

The rotation state of 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko from approach observations with the OSIRIS cameras on Rosetta

S. Mottola; S. C. Lowry; C. Snodgrass; P. L. Lamy; I. Toth; A. Rożek; H. Sierks; Michael F. A’Hearn; F. Angrilli; Cesare Barbieri; M. A. Barucci; J.-L. Bertaux; G. Cremonese; V. Da Deppo; B. Davidsson; M. De Cecco; Stefano Debei; S. Fornasier; M. Fulle; Olivier Groussin; Pedro J. Gutierrez; S. F. Hviid; Wing-Huen Ip; L. Jorda; H. U. Keller; J. Knollenberg; D. Koschny; R. Kramm; E. Kührt; M. Küppers

Aims: Approach observations with the Optical, Spectroscopic, and Infrared Remote Imaging System (OSIRIS) experiment onboard Rosetta are used to determine the rotation period, the direction of the spin axis, and the state of rotation of comet 67Ps nucleus. Methods: Photometric time series of 67P have been acquired by OSIRIS since the post wake-up commissioning of the payload in March 2014. Fourier analysis and convex shape inversion methods have been applied to the Rosetta data as well to the available ground-based observations. Results: Evidence is found that the rotation rate of 67P has significantly changed near the time of its 2009 perihelion passage, probably due to sublimation-induced torque. We find that the sidereal rotation periods P1 = 12.76129 ± 0.00005 h and P2 = 12.4043 ± 0.0007 h for the apparitions before and after the 2009 perihelion, respectively, provide the best fit to the observations. No signs of multiple periodicity are found in the light curves down to the noise level, which implies that the comet is presently in a simple rotation state around its axis of largest moment of inertia. We derive a prograde rotation model with spin vector J2000 ecliptic coordinates λ = 65° ± 15°, β = + 59° ± 15°, corresponding to equatorial coordinates RA = 22°, Dec = + 76°. However, we find that the mirror solution, also prograde, at λ = 275° ± 15°, β = + 50° ± 15° (or RA = 274°, Dec = + 27°), is also possible at the same confidence level, due to the intrinsic ambiguity of the photometric problem for observations performed close to the ecliptic plane. Table 1 is available in electronic form at http://www.aanda.org

Collaboration


Dive into the S. C. Lowry's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. Fitzsimmons

Queen's University Belfast

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

P. L. Lamy

Aix-Marseille University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

S. Fornasier

PSL Research University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

B. Davidsson

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge