Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/2248/5724
Title: | Discovery of Main-belt Comet P/2006 VW139 by Pan-STARRS1 |
Authors: | Hsieh, H. H Yang, Bin Haghighipour, N Kaluna, H. M Fitzsimmons, A Denneau, L Novakovic, B Jedicke, R Wainscoat, R. J Armstrong, J. D Duddy, S. R Lowry, S. C Trujillo, C. A Micheli, M Keane, J. V Urban, L Riesen, T Meech, K. J Abe, S Cheng, Yu-Chi Chen, Wen-Ping Granvik, M Grav, T Ip, Wing-Huen Kinoshita, D Kleyna, J Lacerda, P Lister, T Milani, A Tholen, D. J Vereš, P Lisse, C. M Kelley, M. S Fernández, Y. R Bhatt, B. C Sahu, D. K Kaiser, N Chambers, K. C Hodapp, K. W Magnier, E. A Price, P. A Tonry, J. L |
Keywords: | Comets: general Minor planets Asteroids: general |
Issue Date: | 20-Mar-2012 |
Publisher: | IOP Publishing |
Citation: | The Astrophysical Journal, Vol. 748, No. 1 , L15 |
Abstract: | The main-belt asteroid (300163) 2006 VW139 (later designated P/2006 VW139) was discovered to exhibit comet-like activity by the Pan-STARRS1 (PS1) survey telescope using automated point-spread-function analyses performed by PS1's Moving Object Processing System. Deep follow-up observations show both a short (~10'') antisolar dust tail and a longer (~60'') dust trail aligned with the object's orbit plane, similar to the morphology observed for another main-belt comet (MBC), P/2010 R2 (La Sagra), and other well-established comets, implying the action of a long-lived, sublimation-driven emission event. Photometry showing the brightness of the near-nucleus coma remaining constant over ~30 days provides further evidence for this object's cometary nature, suggesting it is in fact an MBC, and not a disrupted asteroid. A spectroscopic search for CN emission was unsuccessful, though we find an upper limit CN production rate of Q CN < 1.3 × 1024 mol s–1, from which we infer a water production rate of $Q_{\rm H_2O}<10^{26}$ mol s–1. We also find an approximately linear optical spectral slope of 7.2%/1000 Å, similar to other cometary dust comae. Numerical simulations indicate that P/2006 VW139 is dynamically stable for >100 Myr, while a search for a potential asteroid family around the object reveals a cluster of 24 asteroids within a cutoff distance of 68 m s–1. At 70 m s–1, this cluster merges with the Themis family, suggesting that it could be similar to the Beagle family to which another MBC, 133P/Elst-Pizarro, belongs. |
Description: | Open Access |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/2248/5724 |
Appears in Collections: | IIAP Publications Publications based on data from IAO, Hanle |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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Discovery of Main-belt Comet P/2006 VW139.pdf | Open Access | 1.47 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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