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Cometary Plasma Science -- A White Paper in response to the Voyage 2050 Call by the European Space Agency

Authors :
Götz, Charlotte
Gunell, Herber
Volwerk, Martin
Beth, Arnaud
Eriksson, Anders
Galand, Marina
Henri, Pierre
Nilsson, Hans
Wedlund, Cyril Simon
Alho, Markku
Andersson, Laila
Andre, Nicolas
De Keyser, Johan
Deca, Jan
Ge, Yasong
Glaßmeier, Karl-Heinz
Hajra, Rajkumar
Karlsson, Tomas
Kasahara, Satoshi
Kolmasova, Ivana
LLera, Kristie
Madanian, Hadi
Mann, Ingrid
Mazelle, Christian
Odelstad, Elias
Plaschke, Ferdinand
Rubin, Martin
Sanchez-Cano, Beatriz
Snodgrass, Colin
Vigren, Erik
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Comets hold the key to the understanding of our solar system, its formation and its evolution, and to the fundamental plasma processes at work both in it and beyond it. A comet nucleus emits gas as it is heated by the sunlight. The gas forms the coma, where it is ionised, becomes a plasma and eventually interacts with the solar wind. Besides these neutral and ionised gases, the coma also contains dust grains, released from the comet nucleus. As a cometary atmosphere develops when the comet travels through the solar system, large-scale structures, such as the plasma boundaries, develop and disappear, while at planets such large-scale structures are only accessible in their fully grown, quasi-steady state. In situ measurements at comets enable us to learn both how such large-scale structures are formed or reformed and how small-scale processes in the plasma affect the formation and properties of these large scale structures. Furthermore, a comet goes through a wide range of parameter regimes during its life cycle, where either collisional processes, involving neutrals and charged particles, or collisionless processes are at play, and might even compete in complicated transitional regimes. Thus a comet presents a unique opportunity to study this parameter space, from an asteroid-like to a Mars- and Venus-like interaction. Fast flybys of comets have made many new discoveries, setting the stage for a multi-spacecraft mission to accompany a comet on its journey through the solar system. This white paper reviews the present-day knowledge of cometary plasmas, discusses the many questions that remain unanswered, and outlines a multi-spacecraft ESA mission to accompany a comet that will answer these questions by combining both multi-spacecraft observations and a rendezvous mission, and at the same time advance our understanding of fundamental plasma physics and its role in planetary systems.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1908.00377
Document Type :
Working Paper