3.9 Article

First Comet Observations with NIRSPEC-2 at Keck: Outgassing Sources of Parent Volatiles and Abundances Based on Alternative Taxonomic Compositional Baselines in 46P/Wirtanen

Journal

PLANETARY SCIENCE JOURNAL
Volume 2, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.3847/PSJ/abd03c

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NASA Keck PI Data Award
  2. W. M. Keck Foundation
  3. NSF Astronomy and Astrophysics Postdoctoral Fellowship [AST-1801978]
  4. NSF Astronomy and Astrophysics Research grants [AST-2009398, AST-2009910, AST-1616306, AST-1615441, AST-1614471]
  5. NASA Postdoctoral Program
  6. NASA Earth and Space Science Fellowship [NNX16AP49H, NNX14AG84G, 80NSSC17K0705, NNX17AI86G, 18-SSO18_2-0040, 80NSSC20K0341, NNX15AH69G]
  7. NASA [HST-GO-15625, HST-GO-15372, NAS5-26555]

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The upgrade to the NIRSPEC instrument at the Keck II telescope allowed successful near-infrared spectroscopic observations of comet 46P/Wirtanen, determining the abundances and spatial distributions of various volatiles. The study suggests common outgassing sources for certain volatiles, such as C2H2, C2H6, and HCN, while others like H2O and CH3OH have additional and more extended sources. Further research is motivated by these findings to explore if different volatiles in comets have common sources of release and systematic differences exist in their release compared to H2O and CH3OH.
A major upgrade to the NIRSPEC instrument at the Keck II telescope was successfully completed in time for near-infrared spectroscopic observations of comet 46P/Wirtanen during its exceptionally close flyby of Earth in 2018 December. These studies determined the abundances of several volatiles, including C2H2, C2H6, CH3OH, NH3, HCN, H2CO, and H2O. Long-slit spatial distributions of gas rotational temperature and column density are diagnostic for the presence of icy grains in the coma and understanding if different volatiles are associated with common or distinct outgassing sources. These spatial distributions suggest that C2H2, C2H6, and HCN have a common outgassing source, whereas H2O and CH3OH have additional, more extended sources. The synergy of these findings with observations by space missions (Rosetta and EPOXI) motivates continuing studies to address whether or not C2H6, C2H2, and HCN have a common source of release (plausibly associated with CO2) in a larger sample of comets and whether systematic differences exist in the release of these species compared to H2O and CH3OH. Abundances of volatiles are reported relative to H2O, as traditionally done, as well as C2H6. While not unique, the choice of C2H6 demonstrates the value of extending the chemical taxonomy of parent volatiles in comets toward additional compositional baselines and, importantly, closer integration between coma abundances and the underlying volatile associations as revealed by spatial distributions. Our findings on composition and sources of outgassing include information relevant to future evaluations of 46P/Wirtanen as a prospective spacecraft target.

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