Title: Deep Impact
1Deep Impact A Story That May Never End Here
comes a brief summary of what happened so
far Hermann Boehnhardt (MPS Katlenburg-Lindau)
2Mission Spacecraft
- Event
- impact time 4/7/2005 055202 UT
- target Comet 9P/Tempel 1
(Jupiter Family Comet - maybe just 200 years as SPC)
- impact speed 10 km/s (19GJ)
- impact site at southern limb
- obliquity 20-40deg to local
horizon - Mission spacecraft
- mission fly-by impactor S/C
- impactor 360kg (50 Cu)
- instrumentation
- flyby S/C - 2 vis.1 IR camera,
- - IR spectrometer
- impactor - vis. camera
- Mission profile
- launch 12 Jan. 2005
- arrival few days before
perihelion
3Encounter Schematics
Impactor Release E-24 hours
AutoNav Enabled E-2 hr
ITM-1 Start E-88 min
ITM-2 E-48 min
ITM-3 E-15 min
Tempel-1 Nucleus
64 kbps
2-way S-band Crosslink
500 km
Flyby S/C Deflection Maneuver E-23.5 hr
Science and Autonav Imaging to Impact 800 sec
Flyby S/C Science And Impactor Data at 175 kbps
Shield Mode Attitude through Inner Coma
Flyby Science Realtime Data at 175 kbps
TCA TBD sec
Flyby S/C Science Data Playback at 175 kbps to
70-meter DSS
Look-back Imaging
data rates without Reed-Solomon encoding
4DI The Sequence of Events
- oblique impact 20-30deg to local surface
- hot gas at impact site ? detector saturation
- poof ejection (1 ton of hot gas at 5km/s)
- ejecta cloud of dust (1000-10000tons at few
hundred m/s - maximum speed also very low velocities of order
m/s seen) - subsequent gas sublimation due to solar
illumination - Conclusion for cratering experiment
- - crater formation dominated by gravity (not
strength) -
- - crater formation lasted for several minuntes
(at least) - - crater and crater formation not imaged because
of image - saturation (first phase) and high opacity due
to ejecta
5Impact Phenomena
6DI Movies from the Event
? impactor approach
7(No Transcript)
8Nucleus Properties
- Dimensions
- irregular shape 7.6x4.9km
- (between ellipsoid and pyramid)
- mean radius 3.0/-0.1km
- Rotation
- period 40.7h
- axis RA/DEC 294/73deg
- (almost perpendicular to orbital plane)
-
- Albedocolor
- albedo 0.04
- homogenous across nucleus with variations of
0.02 color variations lt 2 - Dust-to-Gas Ratio
- 10 0/-0.5
9Gravity Density
- Gravity (local)
- 0.05 cm/s2 _at_ impact site
- (width of cone base)
-
- Escape velocity
- 1.3 m/s
- Density
- 0.35/-0.12 g/cm3
- (assuming uniform density and applying shape
model) - ? 2 1013kg mass
- Strength
- 200 Pa for impact site
- excavated layers
- high porosity of nucleus material
- sample return easier than thought before ( 10N
may be enough for coring a sample)
10Surface Structure
- smooth rough terrain
- flows?, scarps, layers (from cometesimals?)
- several dozen circular features (very non-uniform
distribution) - ? impact craters !?
- size distribution consistent with impact crater
populations (Gaspra, not Wild2/Borelly)
11Surface Temperature
- 260-329K on sunlit side equilibrium with sunlight
- consistent with STM plus roughness to warm areas
near terminator Ilt20 W K-1 m2 s0.5 - no locations as cold as sublimation temperature
of H2O ice - ice must be below the surface but not far below
- diurnal skin depth 3 cm, annual skin depth 0.9m
- ? primordial/unmodified material within few dm
below surface - ? surface renewed during every apparition,
deep surface layering may not exists
12Normal Activity Outbursts
- short duration (explosive 200 m/s)
- outbursts common - typically 2 per
- week
- outbursts correlated with rotational
- phase
- ? outbursts are endogenic and
- related to surface insolation
- 109kg per perihelion (10cm radius)
- peak of dust production 50-60 days
- before perihelion, peak of water
- production 30 days before perihelion
- factor 2 below previous apparitions
- gt4 active regions on nucleus
13Surface Activity
P positive rotational pole E Ecliptic north S
Sunward
- Dust is better correlated
- with CO2 than with H2O, but
- not perfectly with either
- CO2 activity _at_ south pole in
- darkness
- ? chemically heterogenous
- nucleus
14Water Ice Patches Activity I
- nominal (non-ice) nucleus laboratory water ice
- 3-6 water ice 30 10 µm size particles (large
grains for - undisturbed surface)
- ? solids dominate surface layers even in icy
patches - not enough surface to be significant in overall
outgassing (sub-surface outgassing) - frost from source of outbursts on shoulder?
15Gas Properties
- S/C CO2, H2O, HCN, CH3CN, NH3, C2H2,SO2?, H3O,
CH-X organics - - organics ? strong increase
- after impact,
- - vaporizing in initial ejecta cloud?
- Earth H2O, CO2, C2H6, HCN, C2H2, CH4, CO, H2CO,
CH3OH, - OH, CN, C2, C3, NH2, NH, (CS,
- CH)
- - moderate (1.2-1.5) increase of H2O
- others after impact
- - cloud enriched in ethane 3
- - similar production rate ratios
- as for OC comets!
16Onboard Spectroscopy
17Isotopes
Isotopic ratio best fit for an isotopic mixture
12C/13C 95 15 (Earth 89)
14N/15N 145 20 (Earth 229)
mean observed spectrum synthetic spectrum of
12C14N, 12C15N and 13C14N
18Dust Characteristics
- increased N band flux
- post-impact until 8 July 2005
- ? normal activityrotation
- amorphous crystalline
- silicates found with
- crystalline enhanced post-
- impact
- ? crystalline silicate requires processing T
gt 1000K - impact energy not sufficient to heat amount
of dust ejecta to this T - ? ejecta pristine material
19Dust Composition from Spitzer
phyllosilicates (clay?) present in 9P dust? ?
implications for dust and comet formation scenario
20Ejecta Dust Grains
- pre-impact grains mostly gt 10 µm
- dominated by amorphous olivine-like
- mineralogy
- post-impact (sub-)micron grains
- abundant (? crater obscuration)
- peaked size distribution with
- large grain slope of 3-3.2?
- ? impact energy not enough to shatter
- grains
- ? ejecta grains are pristine
- ? surface dust is loose aggregate of
- small grains of very low strength