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Characterization of the Nucleus, Morphology and Activity of Interstellar Comet 2I/Borisov by Optical and Near-Infrared GROWTH, Apache Point, IRTF, ZTF and Keck Observations

Authors :
Bolin, Bryce T.
Lisse, Carey M.
Kasliwal, Mansi M.
Quimby, Robert
Tan, Hanjie
Copperwheat, Chris
Lin, Zhong-Yi
Morbidelli, Alessandro
Abe, Lyu
Bendjoya, Philippe
Bauer, James
Burdge, Kevin B.
Coughlin, Michael
Fremling, Christoffer
Itoh, Ryosuke
Koss, Michael
Masci, Frank J.
Maeno, Syota
Mamajek, Eric E.
Marocco, Federico
Murata, Katsuhiro
Rivet, Jean-Pierre
Sitko, Michael L.
Stern, Daniel
Vernet, David
Walters, Richard
Yan, Lin
Andreoni, Igor
Bhalerao, Varun
Bodewits, Dennis
De, Kishalay
Deshmukh, Kunal P.
Bellm, Eric C.
Blagorodnova, Nadejda
Buzasi, Derek
Cenko, S. Bradley
Chang, Chan-Kao
Chojnowski, Drew
Dekany, Richard
Duev, Dmitry A.
Graham, Matthew
Juric, Mario
Kramer, Emily A.
Kulkarni, Shrinivas R.
Kupfer, Thomas
Mahabal, Ashish
Neill, James D.
Ngeow, Chow-Choong
Penprase, Bryan
Riddle, Reed
Rodriguez, Hector
Rosnet, Philippe
Smith, Roger M.
Sollerman, Jesper
Soumagnac, Maayane T.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

We present visible and near-infrared photometric and spectroscopic observations of interstellar object 2I/Borisov taken from 2019 September 10 to 2019 November 29 using the GROWTH, the APO ARC 3.5 m and the NASA/IRTF 3.0 m combined with post and pre-discovery observations of 2I obtained by ZTF from 2019 March 17 to 2019 May 5. Comparison with imaging of distant Solar System comets shows an object very similar to mildly active Solar System comets with an out-gassing rate of $\sim$10$^{27}$ mol/sec. The photometry, taken in filters spanning the visible and NIR range shows a gradual brightening trend of $\sim0.03$ mags/day since 2019 September 10 UTC for a reddish object becoming neutral in the NIR. The lightcurve from recent and pre-discovery data reveals a brightness trend suggesting the recent onset of significant H$_2$O sublimation with the comet being active with super volatiles such as CO at heliocentric distances $>$6 au consistent with its extended morphology. Using the advanced capability to significantly reduce the scattered light from the coma enabled by high-resolution NIR images from Keck adaptive optics taken on 2019 October 04, we estimate a diameter of 2I's nucleus of $\lesssim$1.4 km. We use the size estimates of 1I/'Oumuamua and 2I/Borisov to roughly estimate the slope of the ISO size-distribution resulting in a slope of $\sim$3.4$\pm$1.2, similar to Solar System comets and bodies produced from collisional equilibrium.<br />Comment: 22 pages, 7 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in AJ on 12 May 2020

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1910.14004
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ab9305