Two Distinct Populations of Dark Comets Delineated by Orbits and Sizes

Autor: Seligman, Darryl Z., Farnocchia, Davide, Micheli, Marco, Hainaut, Olivier R., Hsieh, Henry H., Feinstein, Adina D., Chesley, Steven R., Taylor, Aster G., Masiero, Joseph, Meech, Karen J.
Rok vydání: 2024
Předmět:
Zdroj: Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci., 121, 2024
Druh dokumentu: Working Paper
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2406424121
Popis: Small bodies are capable of delivering essential prerequisites for the development of life, such as volatiles and organics, to the terrestrial planets. For example, empirical evidence suggests that water was delivered to the Earth by hydrated planetesimals from distant regions of the Solar System. Recently, several morphologically inactive near-Earth objects (NEOs) were reported to experience significant nongravitational accelerations inconsistent with radiation-based effects, and possibly explained by volatile-driven outgassing. However, these "dark comets" display no evidence of comae in archival images, which are the defining feature of cometary activity. Here we report detections of nongravitational accelerations on seven additional objects previously classified as inactive (doubling the population) that could also be explainable by asymmetric mass loss. A detailed search of archival survey and targeted data rendered no detection of dust activity in any of these objects in individual or stacked images. We calculate dust production limits of $\sim10$, $0.1$, and $0.1$ kg s$^{-1}$ for 1998 FR$_{11}$, 2001 ME$_{1}$, and 2003 RM with these data, indicating little or no dust surrounding the objects during the observations. This set of dark comets reveals the delineation between two distinct populations: larger, "outer" dark comets on eccentric orbits that are end members of a continuum in activity level of comets, and smaller, "inner" dark comets on near-circular orbits that could signify a new population. These objects may trace various stages in the life cycle of a previously undetected, but potentially numerous, volatile-rich population that may have provided essential material to the Earth.
Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures, Author's version of Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. Vol. 121 No. 51 published at https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2406424121
Databáze: arXiv