ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
We present a possible correlation between the properties of scattered and thermal radiation from dust and the principal dust characteristics responsible for this relationship. To this end, we use the NASA/PDS archival polarimetric data on cometary dust in the Red (0.62--0.73 $mu$m) and K (2.00--2.39 $mu$m) domains to leverage the relative excess of the polarisation degree of a comet to the average trend at the given phase angle ($P_{rm excess}$) as a metric of the dusts scattered light characteristics. The flux excess of silicate emissions to the continuum around 10 $mu$m ($F_{rm Si}/F_{rm cont}$) is adopted from previous studies as a metric of the dusts MIR feature. The two metrics show a positive correlation when $P_{rm excess}$ is measured in the K domain. No significant correlation was identified in the Red domain. The gas-rich comets have systematically weaker $F_{rm Si}/F_{rm cont}$ than the dust-rich ones, yet both groups retain the same overall tendency with different slope values. The observed positive correlation between the two metrics indicates that composition is a peripheral factor in characterising the dusts polarimetric and silicate emission properties. The systematic difference in $F_{rm Si}/F_{rm cont}$ for gas-rich versus dust-rich comets would rather correspond with the difference in their dust size distribution. Hence, our results suggest that the current MIR spectral models of cometary dust should prioritise the dust size and porosity over the composition. With light scattering being sensitive to different size scales in two wavebands, we expect the K-domain polarimetry to be sensitive to the properties of dust aggregates, such as size and porosity, which might have been influenced by evolutionary processes. On the other hand, the Red-domain polarimetry reflects the characteristics of sub-$mu$m constituents in the aggregate.
We report new lightcurves and phase functions for nine Jupiter-family comets (JFCs). They were observed in the period 2004-2015 with various ground telescopes as part of the Survey of Ensemble Physical Properties of Cometary Nuclei (SEPPCoN) as well
The physical properties of cometary nuclei observed today relate to their complex history and help to constrain their formation and evolution. In this article, we review some of the main physical properties of cometary nuclei and focus in particular
Context: Remote light scattering and thermal infrared observations provide clues about the physical properties of cometary and interplanetary dust particles. Identifying these properties will lead to a better understanding of the formation and evolut
We model the infrared emission from zodiacal dust detected by the IRAS and COBE missions, with the aim of estimating the relative contributions of asteroidal, cometary and interstellar dust to the zodiacal cloud. Our most important result is the dete
Tiny meteoroids entering the Earths atmosphere and inducing meteor showers have long been thought to originate partly from cometary dust. Together with other dust particles, they form a huge cloud around the Sun, the zodiacal cloud. From our previous