Abstract

Aims.We use four observational data sets, mainly from the Rosetta mission, to constrain the activity pattern of the nucleus of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko (67P).Methods.We developed a numerical model that computes the production rate and non-gravitational acceleration of the nucleus of comet 67P as a function of time, taking into account its complex shape with a shape model reconstructed from OSIRIS imagery. We used this model to fit three observational data sets: the trajectory data from flight dynamics; the rotation state as reconstructed from OSIRIS imagery; and the water production measurements from ROSINA of 67P. The two key parameters of our model, adjusted to fit the three data sets all together, are the activity pattern and the momentum transfer efficiency (i.e., the so-calledηparameter of the non-gravitational forces).Results.We find an activity pattern that can successfully reproduce the three data sets simultaneously. The fitted activity pattern exhibits two main features: a higher effective active fraction in two southern super-regions (~10%) outside perihelion compared to the northern regions (<4%), and a drastic rise in effective active fraction of the southern regions (~25−35%) around perihelion. We interpret the time-varying southern effective active fraction by cyclic formation and removal of a dust mantle in these regions. Our analysis supports moderate values of the momentum transfer coefficientηin the range 0.6–0.7; valuesη≤ 0.5 orη≥ 0.8 significantly degrade the fit to the three data sets. Our conclusions reinforce the idea that seasonal effects linked to the orientation of the spin axis play a key role in the formation and evolution of dust mantles, and in turn, they largely control the temporal variations of the gas flux.

Highlights

  • The sublimation of ices when a comet is injected from its reservoir into the inner solar system triggers the emission of molecules

  • We developed a numerical model that computes the production rate and non-gravitational acceleration of the nucleus of comet 67P as a function of time, taking into account its complex shape with a shape model reconstructed from OSIRIS imagery

  • The fitted activity pattern exhibits two main features: a higher effective active fraction in two southern super-regions (∼10%) outside perihelion compared to the northern regions (

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Summary

Introduction

The sublimation of ices when a comet is injected from its reservoir into the inner solar system triggers the emission of molecules This outgassing in turn produces a reaction force that can accelerate the comet nucleus in the opposite direction. A theoretical model describing the nongravitational force (hereafter NGF) produced by the sublimation of ices was established by Marsden et al (1973). This model was based on a simple function describing the heliocentric dependence of the sublimation of cometary water ice, combined with constant scaling parameters A1, A2, and A3 describing the amplitude of the NGA along the three components (radial, transverse, and normal) in the orbital frame of the comet. It is worth mentioning here that these simple models are still in use today to fit astrometric measurements, and to describe cometary orbits

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