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Deep Impact: Working Properties for the Target Nucleus – Comet 9P/Tempel 1
Authors:Michael J S Belton  Karen J Meech  Michael F A’Hearn  Olivier Groussin  Lucy Mcfadden  Carey Lisse  Yanga R Fernández  Jana PittichovÁ  Henry Hsieh  Jochen Kissel  Kenneth Klaasen  Philippe Lamy  Dina Prialnik  Jessica Sunshine  Peter Thomas  Imre Toth
Institution:(1) Belton Space Exploration Initiatives, LLC, Tucson, AZ, U.S.A.;(2) Institute for Astronomy, University of Hawaii, Honolulu, HI, U.S.A.;(3) University of Maryland, College Park, MD, U.S.A.;(4) Max-Planck-Institut für Sonnensystemforschung, Katlenburg-Lindau, Germany;(5) Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, CA, U.S.A.;(6) Laboratoire d’Astronomie Spatiale CNRS, Marseille, France;(7) Department of Geophysics and Planetary Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Israel;(8) Science Applications International Corporation, Chantilly, VA, U.S.A.;(9) Center for Radiophysics and Space Research, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, U.S.A.;(10) Konkoly Observatory, Budapest, Hungary
Abstract:In 1998, Comet 9P/Tempel 1 was chosen as the target of the Deep Impact mission (A’Hearn, M. F., Belton, M. J. S., and Delamere, A., Space Sci. Rev., 2005) even though very little was known about its physical properties. Efforts were immediately begun to improve this situation by the Deep Impact Science Team leading to the founding of a worldwide observing campaign (Meech et al., Space Sci. Rev., 2005a). This campaign has already produced a great deal of information on the global properties of the comet’s nucleus (summarized in Table I) that is vital to the planning and the assessment of the chances of success at the impact and encounter. Since the mission was begun the successful encounters of the Deep Space 1 spacecraft at Comet 19P/Borrelly and the Stardust spacecraft at Comet 81P/Wild 2 have occurred yielding new information on the state of the nuclei of these two comets. This information, together with earlier results on the nucleus of comet 1P/Halley from the European Space Agency’s Giotto, the Soviet Vega mission, and various ground-based observational and theoretical studies, is used as a basis for conjectures on the morphological, geological, mechanical, and compositional properties of the surface and subsurface that Deep Impact may find at 9P/Tempel 1. We adopt the following working values (circa December 2004) for the nucleus parameters of prime importance to Deep Impact as follows: mean effective radius = 3.25± 0.2 km, shape – irregular triaxial ellipsoid with a/b = 3.2± 0.4 and overall dimensions of ∼14.4 × 4.4 × 4.4 km, principal axis rotation with period = 41.85± 0.1 hr, pole directions (RA, Dec, J2000) = 46± 10, 73± 10 deg (Pole 1) or 287± 14, 16.5± 10 deg (Pole 2) (the two poles are photometrically, but not geometrically, equivalent), Kron-Cousins (V-R) color = 0.56± 0.02, V-band geometric albedo = 0.04± 0.01, R-band geometric albedo = 0.05± 0.01, R-band H(1,1,0) = 14.441± 0.067, and mass ∼7×1013 kg assuming a bulk density of 500 kg m−3. As these are working values, {i.e.}, based on preliminary analyses, it is expected that adjustments to their values may be made before encounter as improved estimates become available through further analysis of the large database being made available by the Deep Impact observing campaign. Given the parameters listed above the impact will occur in an environment where the local gravity is estimated at 0.027–0.04 cm s−2 and the escape velocity between 1.4 and 2 m s−1. For both of the rotation poles found here, the Deep Impact spacecraft on approach to encounter will find the rotation axis close to the plane of the sky (aspect angles 82.2 and 69.7 deg. for pole 1 and 2, respectively). However, until the rotation period estimate is substantially improved, it will remain uncertain whether the impactor will collide with the broadside or the ends of the nucleus.
Keywords:comets  space missions  nucleus  9P/Tempel 1
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