Gone in a Blaze of Glory: the Demise of Comet C/2015 D1 (SOHO)
Abstract
We present studies of C/2015 D1 (SOHO), the first sunskirting comet ever seen from ground stations over the past half century. The Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) witnessed its peculiar light curve with a huge dip followed by a flareup around perihelion: the dip was likely caused by sublimation of olivines, directly evidenced by a coincident temporary disappearance of the tail. The flareup likely reflects a disintegration event, which we suggest was triggered by intense thermal stress established within the nucleus interior. Photometric data reveal an increasingly dusty coma, indicative of volatile depletion. A catastrophic mass loss rate of 105 kg s-1 around perihelion was seen. Ground-based Xingming Observatory spotted the post-perihelion debris cloud. Our morphological simulations of post-perihelion images find newly released dust grains of size a 10 μm in radius, however, a temporal increase in a was also witnessed, possibly due to swift dispersions of smaller grains swept away by radiation forces without replenishment. Together with the fading profile of the light curve, a power law dust size distribution with index γ = 3.2 0.1 is derived. We detected no active remaining cometary nuclei over 0.1 km in radius in post-perihelion images acquired at Lowell Observatory. Applying radial non-gravitational parameter, A1 = (1.209 0.118 ) × 10-6 AU day-2, from an isothermal water-ice sublimation model to the SOHO astrometry significantly reduces residuals and sinusoidal trends in the orbit determination. The nucleus mass 108--109 kg, and the radius 50--150 m (bulk density d = 0.4 g cm-3 assumed) before the disintegration are deduced from the photometric data; consistent results were determined from the non-gravitational effects.
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