Bibcode
Lara, L.-M.; Licandro, J.; Oscoz, A.; Motta, V.
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, v.399, p.763-772 (2003)
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2
2003
Journal
Citations
26
Refereed citations
25
Description
Comet 21P/Giacobini-Zinner was observed from Nov. 8 to Dec. 10, 1998.
Pre- and post-perihelion CCD images of the gas (CN, C2) and
dust (green and red continua) coma were obtained with the 82 cm IAC-80
telescope at Teide Observatory (Canary Islands, Spain). For
vp =0.85 rH-0.5 and vd =
1.19 km s-1 (i.e. characteristic of HCN being the CN parent
species), the CN column density profiles are best reproduced with parent
and daughter lifetimes of the order of 19 300 and 256 000 s. An equally
good reproduction of the observed profiles is achieved by considering
that a mixture of nitrogen compounds expanding at vp =1 km
s-1 and with a lifetime of 19 000 s produces CN with an
ejection velocity of vd=2.5 km s-1 and a lifetime
of 174 000 s. Fitting the observed CN profiles with variable velocities
and lifetimes, the results indicate that the nature of the CN precursor
in comet 21P/Giacobini-Zinner is still unclear, ruling out HCN as the
only precursor and favouring a mixture of nitrogen compounds. Regarding
C2, the derived lifetimes are 35 000 and 62 000 s, if the
parent and daughter velocities are fixed at ~ 1 km s-1. Gas
production rates derived by means of the Vectorial modeling with the
mentioned above lifetimes and velocities indicate that (i) the comet
activity decreases with decreasing rH (i.e. peak activity is
not reached at the perihelion), and (ii) as already known, the comet is
typically depleted in C2 with a log {QC_2/
QCN } ~ -0.4. The azimuthally averaged surface brightness
profiles of the continuum images are well fitted with m >=1 in a log
B - log rho representation at projected radial distances (rho ) larger
than 1000 km. The continuum light scattered from the dust in the coma of
comet Giacobini-Zinner is redder than the Sun light on every date from
Nov. 8 to 24, regardless the cometocentric distance. On Nov. 25, there
is a sudden change in the dust color, being considerably bluer than the
Sun, whereas on Dec. 7 and 8, the dust became much redder than it was
before. These color variations do not seem to be related to sudden
variations (relative minimum or maximum) in the cometary activity. The
gas-to-dust mass ratio is ~ 1, but affected by a large uncertainty
(about a factor of 2) since the comet was not simultaneously imaged in
the OH band, and the H2O production rate has been considered
from other measurements taken some weeks before ours.