Rapid evolution of the spin state of comet 41P/Tuttle-Giacobini-Kresak
Abstract
Comet nuclei are small, dynamic objects influenced strongly by their individual history, orbit, rotation and inhomogeneity. Mass loss due to sublimation can exert a profound influence on the physical nature of the cometary nucleus, changing the shape, size, and rotation (Jewitt, in Comets II, 2004). The Rosetta mission to comet 67P showed that these effects are all interrelated (Sierks et al., Science 347, 2015).Comet 41P/Tuttle-Giacobini-Kresak passed Earth as close as 0.142 au in April 2017, allowing observations of the inner coma and an assessment of the rotational state of the nucleus. We acquired observations of comet 41P between March and May 2017 using the 4.3-m Discovery Channel Telescope and the UltraViolet-Optical Telescope (UVOT) on board the Earth-orbiting Swift Gamma Ray Burst Mission.Using CN narrowband imaging and aperture photometry we found that the apparent rotation period of comet 41P more than doubled between March and May 2017, increasing from 20 hours to 50 hours. Measurements of the periodicity in late-March by Knight et al. (CBET 4377, 2017) are consistent with this rate of increase. Comet 41P is the ninth comet for which a rotation period change has been observed (c.f. Samarasinha et al., in Comets II, 2004), but both the fractional change and the rate of change of the period far exceed those observed in the other comets. It is presumably the combination of a long rotation period, high surface activity, and a small nucleus that makes 41P highly susceptible to changes in its rotational state.Extrapolating the comet’s rotation period using its current gas production rates and a simple activity model suggests that the nucleus will continue to spin down, possibly leading to an excited spin state in the next few apparitions. Finally, 41P is known for its large outbursts, and our extrapolation suggest that the comet’s rotation period may have been close to the critical period for splitting in 2001, when it exhibited two significant outbursts.
- Publication:
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AAS/Division for Planetary Sciences Meeting Abstracts #49
- Pub Date:
- October 2017
- Bibcode:
- 2017DPS....4940103B