Fulle, M. and Blum, J. and Rotundi, A. (2019) How Comets Work. The Astrophysical Journal, 879 (1). L8. ISSN 2041-8213
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Abstract
Two major questions regarding comets have been up to now far from any solution. (i) How is it possible that water-ice sublimation from the nucleus surface does not lead to an insulating crust, stopping every gas and dust ejection within a few days? (ii) How is it possible that the gas flow crossing the refractory surface crust ejects dust particles bonded by tensile strengths larger than tens of Pa when the perihelion gas pressure at the nucleus-coma interface is less than one Pa? We have developed a simple but rigorous analytical model, assuming that the cometary nucleus consists of agglomerates of ice and dust ("clusters"). As soon as the clusters become exposed to sunlight, gas diffusion from their inside leads to their dehydration. We find that (i) the gas diffusing from the interior to the surface of a sunlit cluster has a steep density gradient at the cluster surface, which blasts the cluster into particles of sizes larger than or equal to those actually observed by Rosetta dust instruments; (ii) the heat-conduction and diffusion timescales are much shorter than the dehydration timescale, ensuring that the described process prevents any dumping of the nucleus activity driven by water-ice sublimation from 4 au inbound to 4 au outbound; and (iii) the clusters are in fact cm-sized pebbles, so that a cometary nucleus made of pebbles is confirmed to be the only one consistent with cometary gas and dust activity, a process unexplained until now.
Item Type: | Article |
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Subjects: | European Repository > Physics and Astronomy |
Depositing User: | Managing Editor |
Date Deposited: | 01 Jun 2023 05:19 |
Last Modified: | 04 Nov 2023 03:29 |
URI: | http://go7publish.com/id/eprint/2381 |