This close-up image shows the most active
pit, known as Seth_01, observed on the surface of comet
67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko by the Rosetta spacecraft. A new study
suggests that this pit and others like it could be sinkholes, formed by a
surface collapse process similar to the way these features form on
Earth.
Credit: Vincent et al., Nature Publishing Group
The European Space Agency's Rosetta
spacecraft first began orbiting comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko in
August 2014. Almost immediately, scientists began to wonder about
several surprisingly deep, almost perfectly circular pits on the comet's
surface. Now, a new study based on close-up imagery taken by Rosetta
suggests that these pits are sinkholes, formed when ices beneath the
comet's surface sublimate, or turn directly to gas.
The study, which appears in the July 2, 2015 issue of the journal Nature,
reveals that the surface of 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko is variable and
dynamic, undergoing rapid structural changes as it approaches the sun.
Far from simple balls of ice and dust, comets have their own life
cycles. The latest findings are among the first to show, in detail, how
comets change over time.
"These strange, circular pits are just as deep as they are wide.
Rosetta can peer right into them," said Dennis Bodewits, an assistant
research scientist in astronomy at the University of Maryland who is a
co-author on the study. The pits are large, ranging from tens of meters
in diameter up to several hundred meters across.
"We propose that they are sinkholes, formed by a surface collapse
process very similar to the way sinkholes form here on Earth," Bodewits
added. Sinkholes occur on Earth when subsurface erosion removes a large
amount of material beneath the surface, creating a cavern. Eventually
the ceiling of the cavern will collapse under its own weight, leaving a
sinkhole behind. "So we already have a library of information to help us
understand how this process works, which allows us to use these pits to
study what lies under the comet's surface," Bodewits said.
Bodewits and his co-authors analyzed images from Rosetta's Optical,
Spectroscopic and Infrared Remote Imaging System (OSIRIS) narrow angle
camera, which is designed to image the surface of the comet's nucleus.
The team noted two distinct types of pits: deep ones with steep sides
and shallower pits that more closely resemble those seen on other
comets, such as 9P/Tempel 1 and 81P/Wild. The team also observed that
jets of gas and dust streamed from the sides of the deep, steep-sided
pits --a phenomenon they did not see in the shallower pits.
Initially, the Rosetta team suspected that discrete, explosive events
might be responsible for creating the deeper pits. Rosetta observed one
such outburst during its approach to the comet, on April 30, 2014.
Catching this event in the act allowed the team to quantify how much
material had been ejected, and it quickly became obvious that the
numbers just didn't stack up. Explosive outbursts alone could not
explain the formation of these giant pits.
"The amount of material from the outburst was large--about 100,000
kilograms--but this is small compared to the size of the comet and could
only explain a hole a couple of meters in diameter," Bodewits
explained. "The pits we see are much larger. It seems that outbursts
aren't driving the process, but instead are one of the consequences."
Based on the Rosetta observations, the team has proposed a model for
the formation of these sinkholes. A source of heat beneath the comet's
surface causes ices (primarily water, carbon monoxide and carbon
dioxide) to sublimate. The voids created by the loss of these ice chunks
eventually grow large enough that their ceilings collapse under their
own weight, giving rise to the deep, steep-sided circular pits seen on
the surface of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko.
The collapse exposes comet ices to sunlight for the first time, which
causes the ice chunks to begin sublimating immediately. These deeper
pits are therefore thought to be relatively young. Their shallower
counterparts, on the other hand, are most likely older sinkholes with
more thoroughly eroded sidewalls and bottoms that have been filled in by
dust and ice chunks.
"In some sense, these deep sinkholes remind me of the crater
excavated on comet Tempel I by the Deep Impact mission," said Michael
A'Hearn, a Distinguished University Professor Emeritus of astronomy at
UMD and a co-author on the study. A'Hearn also served as principal
investigator on the Deep Impact mission, which coincidentally celebrates
its ten-year anniversary this summer. "The process is completely
different, of course, but both allow us to achieve the same broad goal
of being able to see deeper into a comet."
The European Space Agency officially extended the Rosetta mission on
June 23, 2015, meaning that the spacecraft will have the opportunity to
track comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko for a much longer time period as
it moves away from the sun. The comet will reach perihelion, or its
closest point to the sun, on August 13, 2015. The extension expands the
mission by nine months, from the planned end date of December 2015 to
September 2016. The extra observational time will enable the team to see
how the comet's surface responds to decreasing solar radiation.
The Rosetta mission is operated by the European Space Agency with
national agencies funding the instrumentation and scientific activities.
University of Maryland participation in the OSIRIS camera team is
funded by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (Contract # 1267923) and a
Gauss Professorship from the Göttingen Academy of Sciences (to Michael
A'Hearn). The content of this article does not necessarily reflect the
views of these organizations.
The research paper, "Large heterogeneities in comet 67P as revealed
by active pits from sinkhole collapse," Jean-Baptiste Vincent, et al.,
was published in the July 2, 2015 issue of the journal Nature.
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