Expectations for the Deep Impact collision from cometary nuclei modelling
Using the cometary nucleus model developed by Espinasse et al. (1991), we calculate the thermodynamical evolution of Comet 9P/Tempel 1 over a period of 360 years. Starting from an initially amorphous cometary nucleus which incorporates an icy mixture of H2O and CO, we show that, at the time of Deep...
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Zusammenfassung: | Using the cometary nucleus model developed by Espinasse et al. (1991), we
calculate the thermodynamical evolution of Comet 9P/Tempel 1 over a period of
360 years. Starting from an initially amorphous cometary nucleus which
incorporates an icy mixture of H2O and CO, we show that, at the time of Deep
Impact collision, the crater is expected to form at depths where ice is in its
crystalline form. Hence, the subsurface exposed to space should not be
primordial. We also attempt an order-of-magnitude estimate of the heating and
material ablation effects on the crater activity caused by the 370 Kg
projectile released by the DI spacecraft. We thus show that heating effects
play no role in the evolution of crater activity. We calculate that the CO
production rate from the impacted region should be about 300-400 times higher
from the crater resulting from the impact with a 35 m ablation than over the
unperturbed nucleus in the immediate post-impact period. We also show that the
H2O production rate is decreased by several orders of magnitude at the crater
base just after ablation. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.astro-ph/0506721 |