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Anny-Chantal Levasseur-Regourd Jessica Agarwal Hervé Cottin Cécile Engrand George Flynn Marco Fulle Tamas Gombosi Yves Langevin Jérémie Lasue Thurid Mannel Sihane Merouane Olivier Poch Nicolas Thomas Andrew Westphal 《Space Science Reviews》2018,214(3):64
This review presents our understanding of cometary dust at the end of 2017. For decades, insight about the dust ejected by nuclei of comets had stemmed from remote observations from Earth or Earth’s orbit, and from flybys, including the samples of dust returned to Earth for laboratory studies by the Stardust return capsule. The long-duration Rosetta mission has recently provided a huge and unique amount of data, obtained using numerous instruments, including innovative dust instruments, over a wide range of distances from the Sun and from the nucleus. The diverse approaches available to study dust in comets, together with the related theoretical and experimental studies, provide evidence of the composition and physical properties of dust particles, e.g., the presence of a large fraction of carbon in macromolecules, and of aggregates on a wide range of scales. The results have opened vivid discussions on the variety of dust-release processes and on the diversity of dust properties in comets, as well as on the formation of cometary dust, and on its presence in the near-Earth interplanetary medium. These discussions stress the significance of future explorations as a way to decipher the formation and evolution of our Solar System. 相似文献
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Noé Lugaz Ilia I. Roussev Tamas I. Gombosi 《Advances in Space Research (includes Cospar's Information Bulletin, Space Research Today)》2011
Transients in the heliosphere, including coronal mass ejections (CMEs) and corotating interaction regions can be imaged to large heliocentric distances by heliospheric imagers (HIs), such as the HIs onboard STEREO and SMEI onboard Coriolis. These observations can be analyzed using different techniques to derive the CME speed and direction. In this paper, we use a three-dimensional (3-D) magneto-hydrodynamic (MHD) numerical simulation to investigate one of these methods, the fitting method of and . Because we use a 3-D simulation, we can determine with great accuracy the CME initial speed, its speed at 1 AU and its average transit speed as well as its size and direction of propagation. We are able to compare the results of the fitting method with the values from the simulation for different viewing angles between the CME direction of propagation and the Sun-spacecraft line. We focus on one simulation of a wide (120–140°) CME, whose initial speed is about 800 km s−1. For this case, we find that the best-fit speed is in good agreement with the speed of the CME at 1 AU, and this, independently of the viewing angle. The fitted direction of propagation is not in good agreement with the viewing angle in the simulation, although smaller viewing angles result in smaller fitted directions. This is due to the extremely wide nature of the ejection. A new fitting method, proposed to take into account the CME width, results in better agreement between fitted and actual directions for directions close to the Sun–Earth line. For other directions, it gives results comparable to the fitting method of Sheeley et al. (1999). The CME deceleration has only a small effect on the fitted direction, resulting in fitted values about 1–4° higher than the actual values. 相似文献
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Szegö Károly Glassmeier Karl-Heinz Bingham Robert Bogdanov Alexander Fischer Christian Haerendel Gerhard Brinca Armando Cravens Tom Dubinin Eduard Sauer Konrad Fisk Len Gombosi Tamas Schwadron Nathan Isenberg Phil Lee Martin Mazelle Christian Möbius Eberhard Motschmann Uwe Shapiro Vitali D. Tsurutani Bruce Zank Gary 《Space Science Reviews》2000,94(3-4):429-671
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