The Rosetta spacecraft, currently orbiting Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, has spotted 120 bright, reflective spots on the surface of the comet, for which water ice is a plausible explanation
By andImages of six different patches on the surface of Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko that show shimmering patches of what scientists think could be water ice. The middle inset shows the general region where each image was taken.
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Patches of water ice appear to be speckled across the surface of a comet, according to a new study using observations from a European space probe.
"Water ice is the most plausible explanation for the occurrence and properties of these features," said Antoine Pommerol, a physicist at the University of Bern, in a statement. []
"At the time of our observations, the comet was far enough from the sun such that the rate at which water ice would sublimate would have been less than 1 mm per hour of incident solar energy," , who is lead author on a study analyzing the bright spots. "By contrast, if carbon dioxide or carbon monoxide ice had been exposed, it would have rapidly sublimated when illuminated by the same amount of sunlight. Thus, we would not expect to see that type of ice stable on the surface at this time."
The spots are up to 10 times brighter than the average surface brightness of the , as measured by Rosetta. Sometimes they appear together, particularly when they are at the bottom of cliffs. The research team speculates this is because the cliff wall recently eroded or collapsed, revealing material below the dusty surface.
Examples of bright spots seen on Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko in September 2014 by the Rosetta probe. A new analysis suggests the patches could be water ice.In other locations, bright spots have been observed alone. Scientists believe these instances represent objects that lifted off the surface when the comet's motion was more active. These objects, however, were not moving fast enough to escape the comet's gravitational pull altogether.Comets are known to be rich in ices, based on observations of the trails they leave behind. When comets approach , the heat of the star warms the comet's surface and causes the ice to melt. This process also releases dust clumped near the ice. But not all of the dust escapes, leaving the surfaces of comets very dark as the dust settles back on to the surface, or fails to leave in the first place.
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