Bibcode
Fernández, Julio A.; Licandro, J.; Moreno, Fernando; Sosa, Andrea; Cabrera-Lavers, A.; de León, J.; Birtwhistle, Peter
Bibliographical reference
Icarus, Volume 295, p. 34-45.
Advertised on:
10
2017
Journal
Citations
14
Refereed citations
12
Description
Images and low-resolution spectra of the near-Earth Jupiter family comet
(JFC) 249P/LINEAR in the visible range obtained with the instrument
OSIRIS in the 10.4 m Gran Telescopio Canarias (GTC) (La Palma, Spain) on
January 3, 4, 6 and February 6, 2016 are presented, together with a
series of images obtained with the 0.4m telescope of the Great Shefford
Observatory obtained on Oct. 22 and 27, and Nov. 1 and 24, 2006. The
reflectance spectrum of 249P is similar to that of a B-type asteroid.
The comet has an absolute (visual) nuclear magnitude HV =
17.0 ± 0.4 , which corresponds to a radius of about 1-1.3 km for
a geometric albedo ∼ 0.04 - 0.07 . From the analysis of GTC images
using a Monte Carlo dust tail code we find that the time of maximum dust
ejection rate was around 1.6 days before perihelion. The analysis of the
dust tails during the 2006 and 2016 perihelion approaches reveals that,
during both epochs, the comet repeated the same dust ejection pattern,
with a similar short-lived activity period of about 20 days (FWHM)
around perihelion and a dust loss rate peaking at 145 ± 50 kg/s.
The total dust mass ejected during its last perihelion passage was (2.5
± 0.9) × 108 kg, almost all this mass being
emitted before the first observation of January 3, 2016. The activity
onset, duration, and total ejected mass were very similar during the
2006 perihelion passage. This amount of dust mass is very low as
compared with that from other active JFCs. The past orbital evolution of
249P and 100 clones were also followed over a time scale of ∼ 5
× 104 yr. The object and more than 60% of the clones
remained bound to the near-Earth region for the whole computed period,
keeping its perihelion distance within the range q ≃ 0.4 - 1.1 au.
The combination of photometric and spectroscopic observations and
dynamical studies show that the near-Earth comet 249P/LINEAR has several
peculiar features that clearly differentiate it from typical JFCs. We
may be in front of a new class of near-Earth JFC whose source region is
not the distant trans-neptunian population, but much closer in the
asteroid belt. Therefore, 249P/LINEAR may be a near-Earth counterpart of
the so-called main-belt comets or active asteroids.
Related projects
Minor Bodies of the Solar System
This project studies the physical and compositional properties of the so-called minor bodies of the Solar System, that includes asteroids, icy objects, and comets. Of special interest are the trans-neptunian objects (TNOs), including those considered the most distant objects detected so far (Extreme-TNOs or ETNOs); the comets and the comet-asteroid
Julia de
León Cruz