TY - JOUR A1 - Marschall, Raphael A1 - Skorov, Yuri A1 - Zakharov, Vladimir A1 - Rezac, Ladislav A1 - Gerig, Selina-Barbara A1 - Christou, Chariton A1 - Dadzie, S. Kokou A1 - Migliorini, Alessandra A1 - Rinaldi, Giovanna A1 - Agarwal, Jessica A1 - Vincent, Jean-Baptiste A1 - Kappel, David T1 - Cometary comae-surface links the physics of gas and dust from the surface to a spacecraft JF - Space science reviews N2 - A comet is a highly dynamic object, undergoing a permanent state of change. These changes have to be carefully classified and considered according to their intrinsic temporal and spatial scales. The Rosetta mission has, through its contiguous in-situ and remote sensing coverage of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko (hereafter 67P) over the time span of August 2014 to September 2016, monitored the emergence, culmination, and winding down of the gas and dust comae. This provided an unprecedented data set and has spurred a large effort to connect in-situ and remote sensing measurements to the surface. In this review, we address our current understanding of cometary activity and the challenges involved when linking comae data to the surface. We give the current state of research by describing what we know about the physical processes involved from the surface to a few tens of kilometres above it with respect to the gas and dust emission from cometary nuclei. Further, we describe how complex multidimensional cometary gas and dust models have developed from the Halley encounter of 1986 to today. This includes the study of inhomogeneous outgassing and determination of the gas and dust production rates. Additionally, the different approaches used and results obtained to link coma data to the surface will be discussed. We discuss forward and inversion models and we describe the limitations of the respective approaches. The current literature suggests that there does not seem to be a single uniform process behind cometary activity. Rather, activity seems to be the consequence of a variety of erosion processes, including the sublimation of both water ice and more volatile material, but possibly also more exotic processes such as fracture and cliff erosion under thermal and mechanical stress, sub-surface heat storage, and a complex interplay of these processes. Seasons and the nucleus shape are key factors for the distribution and temporal evolution of activity and imply that the heliocentric evolution of activity can be highly individual for every comet, and generalisations can be misleading. KW - comets KW - coma KW - gas KW - dust KW - dynamics KW - modelling KW - inversion Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s11214-020-00744-0 SN - 0038-6308 SN - 1572-9672 VL - 216 IS - 8 PB - Springer CY - Dordrecht ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Tosi, Federico A1 - Capaccioni, F. A1 - Capria, M. T. A1 - Mottola, Stefano A1 - Zinzi, A. A1 - Ciarniello, M. A1 - Filacchione, G. A1 - Hofstadter, M. A1 - Fonti, S. A1 - Formisano, M. A1 - Kappel, David A1 - Kührt, E. A1 - Leyrat, C. A1 - Vincent, J-B A1 - Arnold, G. A1 - De Sanctis, M. C. A1 - Longobardo, Andrea A1 - Palomba, E. A1 - Raponi, A. A1 - Rousseau, Batiste A1 - Schmitt, Bernard A1 - Barucci, Maria Antonietta A1 - Bellucci, Giancarlo A1 - Benkhoff, Johannes A1 - Bockelee-Morvan, D. A1 - Cerroni, P. A1 - Combe, J-Ph A1 - Despan, D. A1 - Erard, Stéphane A1 - Mancarella, F. A1 - McCord, T. B. A1 - Migliorini, Alessandra A1 - Orofino, V A1 - Piccioni, G. T1 - The changing temperature of the nucleus of comet 67P induced by morphological and seasonal effects JF - Nature astronomy N2 - Knowledge of the surface temperature distribution on a comet’s nucleus and its temporal evolution at different timescales is key to constraining its thermophysical properties and understanding the physical processes that take place at and below the surface. Here we report on time-resolved maps of comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko retrieved on the basis of infrared data acquired by the Visible InfraRed and Thermal Imaging Spectrometer (VIRTIS) onboard the Rosetta orbiter in 2014, over a roughly two-month period in the pre-perihelion phase at heliocentric distances between 3.62 and 3.31 au from the Sun. We find that at a spatial resolution ≤15 m per pixel, the measured temperatures point out the major effect that self-heating, due to the complex shape of the nucleus, has on the diurnal temperature variation. The bilobate nucleus of comet 67P also induces daytime shadowing effects, which result in large thermal gradients. Over longer periods, VIRTIS-derived temperature values reveal seasonal changes driven by decreasing heliocentric distance combined with an increasing abundance of ice within the uppermost centimetre-thick layer, which implies the possibility of having a largely pristine nucleus interior already in the shallow subsurface Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/s41550-019-0740-0 SN - 2397-3366 VL - 3 IS - 7 SP - 649 EP - 658 PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - London ER -