Abstract

ABSTRACT The structure of cometary dust is a tracer of growth processes in the formation of planetesimals. Instrumentation on board the Rosetta mission to comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko captured dust particles and analysed them in situ. However, these deposits are a product of a collision within the instrument. We conducted laboratory experiments with cometary dust analogues, simulating the collection process by Rosetta instruments (specifically COSIMA, MIDAS). In Paper I, we reported that velocity is a key driver in determining the appearance of deposits. Here in Paper II, we use materials with different monomer sizes, and study the effect of tensile strength on the appearance of deposits. We find that mass transfer efficiency increases from ∼1 up to ∼10 per cent with increasing monomer diameter from 0.3 to 1.5 $\mu\mathrm{ m}$ (i.e. tensile strength decreasing from ∼12 to ∼3 kPa), and velocities increasing from 0.5 to 6 m s−1. Also, the relative abundance of small fragments after impact is higher for material with higher tensile strength. The degeneracy between the effects of velocity and material strength may be lifted by performing a closer study of the deposits. This experimental method makes it possible to estimate the mass transfer efficiency in the COSIMA instrument. Extrapolating these results implies that more than half of the dust collected during the Rosetta mission has not been imaged. We analysed two COSIMA targets containing deposits from single collisions. The collision that occurred closest to perihelion passage led to more small fragments on the target.

Highlights

  • Dust growth is the starting point of planet formation in the early Solar system

  • We present the results of nine experiments, one for every combination of monomer size d0 = (0.3, 1.0, 1.5) μm and v

  • Upon analysis of the pre-impact movies, the breakup of particles upon launch caused the material with low tensile strength to contain relatively more small fragments compared to the high-strength material

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Summary

Introduction

Dust growth is the starting point of planet formation in the early Solar system. various barriers exist that inhibit growth from dust to planetesimal, and onwards to larger bodies (Dominik et al 2007; Johansen et al 2014; Blum 2018). Being kilometre-sized bodies that have spent most of their existence in cold regions of the Solar system, they contain ‘fossilized’ evidence of early dust growth processes (Blum et al 2017). This notion is supported by in situ measurements of cometary dust particles by spacecraft (Levasseur-Regourd et al 2018). Discussion is ongoing whether these morphologies relate to different dust species (Della Corte et al 2015; Fulle et al 2015, 2016b; Langevin et al 2016; Merouane et al 2016; Fulle & Blum 2017) All of these experiments only look at the particles after they interacted

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