17–19 mai 2016
Meudon site
Fuseau horaire Europe/Paris

NUCLEUS AND ACTIVITY OF COMET 67P THROUGH THE EYES OF THE ROSETTA/OSIRIS CAMERAS

19 mai 2016, 10:00
45m
Amphitheater Building 18 (Meudon site)

Amphitheater Building 18

Meudon site

Talk The Rosetta mission The Rosetta Mission

Orateur

Holger Sierks (Max planck Institute, Gottingen, Germany)

Description

Comets with their coma and tail are a spectacular sight on the night sky; they are important objects to understand the origin of our solar system. Comets are pristine and thus carry information on how they initially formed 4.5 billion years ago. 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko is the first comet studied in detail with a spacecraft in its vicinity for more than two years along the orbit around the sun. Onboard the Rosetta spacecraft, the two scientific cameras, the OSIRIS narrow- and the wide-angle camera, are observing the cometary nucleus, its activity, as well as the dust and gas environment. The presentation will give an overview on what OSIRIS observed. The scientific results reveal a nucleus with two lobes and varied morphology. Active regions are located at steep cliffs and collapsed pits which form collimated gas jets. Dust is accelerated by the gas, forming bright jet filaments and the large scale, diffuse coma of the comet.

Auteur principal

Holger Sierks (Max planck Institute, Gottingen, Germany)

Documents de présentation