The Unusual Apparition of Comet 252P/2000 G1 (LINEAR) and Comparison with Comet P/2016 BA14 (PanSTARRS)
Abstract
We imaged Comet 252P/2000 G1 (LINEAR) (hereafter 252P) with the Hubble Space Telescope and both 252P and P/2016 BA14 (PanSTARRS) (hereafter BA14) with the Discovery Channel Telescope in March and April 2016, surrounding its close encounter to Earth. The r'-band Af of 252P in a 0.2"-radius aperture were 16.80.3 and 571 cm on March 14 and April 4, respectively, and its gas production rates were: Q(OH) = (5.80.1)×1027 s-1, and Q(CN) = (1.250.01)×1025 s-1 on April 17. The r'-band upper limit Af of BA114 was 0.190.01 cm in a 19.2"-radius aperture, and Q(CN) = (1.40.1)1022 s-1 on April 17, 2017. 252P shows a bright and narrow jet of a few hundred kilometers long in the sunward direction, changing its projected position angle in the sky with a periodicity consistent with 7.24 hours. However, its photometric lightcurve is consistent with a periodicity of 5.41 hours. We suggest that the nucleus of 252P is likely in a non-principal axis rotation. The nucleus radius of 252P is estimated to be about 0.30.03 km, indicating an active fraction of 40% to >100% in its 2016 apparition. Evidence implies a possible cloud of slow-moving grains surrounding the nucleus. The activity level of 252P in the 2016 apparition increased by two orders of magnitude from its previous apparitions, making this apparition unusual. On the other hand, the activity level of BA14 appears to be at least three orders of magnitude lower than that of 252P, despite its ten times or larger surface area.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.