Shape evolution of cometary nuclei via anisotropic mass loss

Vavilov, D. E.; Eggl, S.; Medvedev, Yu. D.; Zatitskiy, P. B.

Russia, United States

Abstract

Context. Breathtaking imagery recorded during the European Space Agency Rosetta mission confirmed the bilobate nature of the nucleus of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. The peculiar appearance of the nucleus is not unique among comets. The majority of cometary cores imaged at high resolution exhibit a similar build. Various theories have been brought forward as to how cometary nuclei attain such peculiar shapes.
Aims: We illustrate that anisotropic mass loss and local collapse of subsurface structures caused by non-uniform exposure of the nucleus to solar irradiation can transform initially spherical comet cores into bilobed cores.
Methods: We derived a mathematical framework to describe the changes in morphology resulting from non-uniform insolation during the spin-orbit evolution of a nucleus. We solved the resulting partial differential equations that govern the change in the shape of a nucleus subject to mass loss and consequent collapse of depleted subsurface structures analytically for simple insolation configurations and numerically for more realistic scenarios.
Results: The proposed mechanism is capable of explaining why a large percentage of periodic comets appear to have peanut-shaped cores and why light-curve amplitudes of comet nuclei are on average larger than those of typical main belt asteroids of the same size.

2019 Astronomy and Astrophysics
Rosetta 5