Abstract:Comets contain the best-preserved material from the beginning of our planetary system. Their nuclei and comae composition reveal clues about physical and chemical conditions during the early Solar system when comets formed. ROSINA (Rosetta Orbiter Spectrometer for Ion and Neutral Analysis) onboard the Rosetta spacecraft has measured the coma composition of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko with well sampled time resolution per rotation. Measurements were made over many comet rotation periods and a wide range of latitudes. These measurements show large fluctuations in composition in a heterogeneous coma that has diurnal and possibly seasonal variations in the major outgassing species: H 2 O, CO, and CO 2 . These results indicate a complex coma-nucleus relationship where seasonal variations may be driven by temperature differences just below the comet surface.One Sentence Summary: ROSINA/DFMS shows that 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko has a highly heterogeneous coma with large diurnal and possibly seasonal variations. Main Text:Initially, comets were classified depending on the location where they formed in the protoplanetary disc (1,2). This classification assumed a similar composition of the nucleus within a given formation region. No cometary nucleus composition has been sampled in situ. Rather, it is implicitly assumed that measurements of the outgassing of comets reveal the composition of the volatile components of the nucleus. However, compositional homogeneity of at least one comet was confirmed by studying outgassing from the fragments of the broken up comet Schwassmann-Wachmann 3 (3). Detailed observations of other cometary comae indicated that there is evidence of heterogeneity. Missions to comet Halley detected release of volatiles in multiple jet-like features that were dominantly seen on the sunlit side of the nucleus (4, 5). The Deep Impact mission detected asymmetries in composition in the coma of Tempel 1 (6). In particular, these remote sensing observations at Tempel 1 indicated an absence of correlation between H 2 O and CO 2 in the coma.Detailed, close up cometary images have also showed visible differences between different areas of cometary nuclei. These images suggested that heterogeneity in the coma of a comet may be related to heterogeneity of the nucleus. Observations by EPOXI at Hartley 2 in 2010 near perihelion indicated that the nucleus is complex, with two different sized lobes separated by a middle waist region that is smoother and lighter in color (7). Outgassing from sunlit surfaces of the nucleus revealed that the waist and one of the lobes were very active. A CO 2 source was detected at the small lobe of the comet, while the waist was more active in H 2 O and had a significantly lower CO 2 content. Based on these coma observations, it has been tentatively suggested that the heterogeneity in the comet's nucleus was primordial (7). Seasonal effects could not be ruled out because the observations also showed a complex rotational state for the comet (7). The smaller of the two lobes ...
Conditions in the protosolar nebula have left their mark in the composition of cometary volatiles, thought to be some of the most pristine material in the solar system. Cometary compositions represent the end point of processing that began in the parent molecular cloud core and continued through the collapse of that core to form the protosun and the solar nebula, and finally during the evolution of the solar nebula itself as the cometary bodies were accreting. Disentangling the effects of the various epochs on the final composition of a comet is complicated. But comets are not the only source of information about the solar nebula. Protostellar disks around young stars similar to the protosun provide a way of investigating the evolution of disks similar to the solar nebula while they are in the process of evolving to form their own solar systems. In this way we can learn about the physical and chemical conditions under which comets formed, and about the types of dynamical processing that shaped the solar system we see today.This paper summarizes some recent contributions to our understanding of both cometary volatiles and the composition, structure and evolution of protostellar disks.
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