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5 th SECCHI Consortium Meeting Orsay, France SECCHI Observations of Comets and Minor Planets Karl Battams (NRL)
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Overview ● SOHO Recap Current comet status Comet highlight ● SECCHI – Early Results HI-2, HI-1 and COR-2 The COR-2 Kreutz comet problem... ● Prospects For SECCHI Comets Science discovery potential New object discovery potential ● Some Highlights For This Coming Year
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SOHO – History's Greatest Comet Discoverer! ● To date, SOHO has discovered 1,273 previously unknown comets 1,069 Kreutz 30 Marsden 29 Kracht 73 Meyer 72 Non-group (including 3 “Kracht II”; several “pairs”) ● SOHO has discovered three well-populated comet groups
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SOHO Observations of Known Objects ● Asteroids Ceres and Vesta ● Pleasant surprises Several of Jupiter's moons! ● Comets Over a dozen comets (Machholz (twice), Kudo- Fujikawa, NEAT, Bradfield, McNaught, ASAS...)
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Some SOHO Comet Highlights ● Nearly 1,300 new discoveries!! ● Link between comet Machholz and the Marsden and Kracht groups (and two meteor showers... and an asteroid...) Wealth of information on the dynamics and evolution of old comets ● “Clusters” of comets just hours apart Information regarding pre-perihelion fragmentation of comets ● CME striking the tail of comet NEAT Information on solar wind, comet dust tails and CME-comet interactions
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SECCHI – Early Results: HI-2 Observations ● Stars Apparent limiting magnitude: ~m11 ● Too many stars! ● Comets and Minor Planets: Comet C/2006 M4 (SWAN) (m9.6) Tail of comet C/2006 P1 (McNaught) ● And later, all of it! Asteroid 15 Eunomia (m10.1)
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SECCHI – Early Results: HI-2 Observations ● Other Objects: M31 (Andromeda) M16, M17, M22, M25, M28... Milky Way LMC, SMC Many more!
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SECCHI – Early Results: HI-1 Observations ● Stars: Apparent limiting magnitude: almost m14? m12 stars certainly visible Image courtesy of A.Watson, SOHO comet hunter (Australia) using “Starry Night” software
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● Minor Planets: (15) Eunomia (10) Hygiea (532) Herculina (8) Flora (1) Ceres (29) Amphitrite (349) Dembowska (6) Hebe (14) Irene (95) Arethusa (m13.3!) (219) Thusnelda ● And that's just in the HI-1 A data! SECCHI – Early Results: HI-1 Observations
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● Comets: C/2006 M4 (SWAN) at m9.6 Spectacular C/2006 P1 (McNaught) at m-5.5! ● High-resolution images of dust tail and striae Five SOHO-discovered Kreutz- group comets ● Visible prior to their LASCO C3 appearance! ● HI-1 more sensitive than LASCO C3 SECCHI – Early Results: HI-1 Observations
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SECCHI – Early Results: COR-2 Observations ● Apparent limiting magnitude: at least m11 Lots of stars ● Observed comets: Surprisingly few! Over 40 “SOHO” Kreutz have passed through COR-2 ● We have seen just four of them What's the problem? ● Exposure times? Bandpass? Polarization?
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● SECCHI: A salt-free diet? Kreutz comets show up well in the sodium-D line (589.0nm, 589.6nm) ● LASCO C3 (Clear) bandpass: 400-900nm ● LASCO C2 (Orange) bandpass: 520-640nm ● SECCHI COR-2 bandpass: 650-750nm ● SECCHI HI-1 bandpass: 630-730nm Sodium-D not visible in COR-2 or HI-1! But... ● HI-1 is more sensitive to Kreutz than LASCO C3 SECCHI – Early Results: COR-2 Observations
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● So why so few COR-2 Kreutz comets? Polarized images? ● Kreutz still show in LASCO C2 polarized images, though are noticeably fainter Exposure time? ● LASCO C2 exposures are quadrupled for polarized C2 images (to 100 secs) ● Answer: Probably both (but I think longer exposures would really help...) SECCHI – Early Results: COR-2 Observations
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Scientific Potential ● Discoveries of new comet populations would add to what is known from SOHO of the end life of a comet ● HI observations of “SOHO” comets will extend light curves to much greater distances ● Greatly improved orbit determinations ● Detailed images of comet tails (e.g. McNaught) lead to better understanding of solar wind / comet interaction ● Possible CME-comet interactions ● First 3-D reconstruction of comets
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SECCHI Object Discovery Prospects ● HI-2 Discoveries extremely infrequent ● Other surveys have it covered ● HI-1 Discoveries very likely and relatively frequent ● COR-2 Could still surprise us... ● COR-1 Very unlikely to make new discoveries due to limited field of view
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Some Highlights For This Year... ● Comet 2P/Encke Mag 6, will pass from HI-1A into HI-1B (also LASCO C3) (late April) ● Comet 96P/Machholz Mag 8 (very approx), LASCO C3 (faint) and HI-1B (early April) ● C/1999 R1 = C/2002 R5 (SOHO) Predicted 3rd perihelion passage (~September) Mag 6; LASCO C2, C3 and (hopefully) HI-1B ● Many more asteroids...
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