The composition of cometary volatiles
Abstract
The composition of cometary ices provides key information on the chemical and physical properties of the outer solar nebula where comets formed, 4.6 G.y. ago. This chapter summarizes our current knowledge of the volatile composition of cometary nuclei, based on spectroscopic observations and in situ measurements of parent molecules and noble gases in cometary comae. The processes that govern the excitation and emission of parent molecules in the radio, infrared (IR), and ultraviolet (UV) wavelength regions are reviewed. The techniques used to convert line or band fluxes into molecular production rates are described. More than two dozen parent molecules have been identified, and we describe how each is investigated. The spatial distribution of some of these molecules has been studied by in situ measurements, long-slit IR and UV spectroscopy, and millimeter wave mapping, including interferometry. The spatial distributions of CO, H2CO, and OCS differ from that expected during direct sublimation from the nucleus, which suggests that these species are produced, at least partly, from extended sources in the coma. Abundance determinations for parent molecules are reviewed, and the evidence for chemical diversity among comets is discussed.
- Publication:
-
Comets II
- Pub Date:
- 2004
- Bibcode:
- 2004come.book..391B