CN morphology studies of Comet 103P/Hartley 2

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Abstract

We report on narrowband CN imaging of Comet 103P/Hartley 2 obtained at Lowell Observatory on 39 nights from 2010 July until 2011 January. We observed two features, one generally to the north and the other generally to the south. The CN morphology varied during the apparition: no morphology was seen in July; in August and September, the northern feature dominated and appeared as a mostly face-on spiral; in October, November, and December, the northern and southern features were roughly equal in brightness and looked like more side-on corkscrews; in January, the southern feature was dominant but the morphology was indistinct due to very low signal. The morphology changed smoothly during each night and similar morphology was seen from night to night. However, the morphology did not exactly repeat each rotation cycle, suggesting that there is a small non-principal axis rotation. Based on the repetition of the morphology, we find evidence that the fundamental rotation period was increasing: 16.7hr from August 13 to 17, 17.2hr from September 10 to 13, 18.2hr from October 12 to 19, and 18.7hr from October 31 to November 7. We conducted Monte Carlo jet modeling to constrain the pole orientation and locations of the active regions based on the observed morphology. Our preliminary, self-consistent pole solution has an obliquity of 10° relative to the comet's orbital plane (i.e., it is centered near R.A. = 257° and decl. = +67° with an uncertainty around this position of about 15°) and has two mid-latitude sources, one in each hemisphere. © 2011. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

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Knight, M. M., & Schleicher, D. G. (2011). CN morphology studies of Comet 103P/Hartley 2. Astronomical Journal, 141(6). https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-6256/141/6/183

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