Bibcode
Kidger, M. R.
Bibliographical reference
Earth, Moon, and Planets, v. 90, Issue 1, p. 157-165 (2002).
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3
2002
Citations
5
Refereed citations
4
Description
The evolution of the morphology of C/1999 S4 (LINEAR) is examined from a
series of images taken from shortly before the disruption of the nucleus
until 10 days afterwards. This is combined with light curve data to
provide a unique documentation of the early evolution of the disruption
event. Neither images from the 1-m Jacobus Kapteyn Telescope nor the
2.5-m Isaac Newton Telescope at the Roque de los Muchachos Observatory
(La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain) show no evidence of bright sub-nuclei,
although the presence of a well-defined stable lance-point structure in
the head of the comet indicates that a dust and gas producing source
remained active in this region. The centre of brightness of the coma
moved in the anti-solar direction at a few tens of metres per second
after disruption indicating that it was a mainly dust structure. The
contrast in the fragmentation history of comets such as C/1999 S4,
C/2001 A2 and 141P/Machholz 2 suggests that there is a wide variation in
nucleus properties from highly unstable and loosely bound rubble piles
to relatively consolidated conglomerates.