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1.
Disruptive collisions in the main belt can liberate fragments from parent bodies ranging in size from several micrometers to tens of kilometers in diameter. These debris bodies group at initially similar orbital locations. Most asteroid-sized fragments remain at these locations and are presently observed as asteroid families. Small debris particles are quickly removed by Poynting-Robertson drag or comminution but their populations are replenished in the source locations by collisional cascade. Observations from the Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS) showed that particles from particular families have thermal radiation signatures that appear as band pairs of infrared emission at roughly constant latitudes both above and below the Solar System plane. Here we apply a new physical model capable of linking the IRAS dust bands to families with characteristic inclinations. We use our results to constrain the physical properties of IRAS dust bands and their source families. Our results indicate that two prominent IRAS bands at inclinations ≈2.1° and ≈9.3° are byproducts of recent asteroid disruption events. The former is associated with a disruption of a ≈30-km asteroid occurring 5.8 Myr ago; this event gave birth to the Karin family. The latter came from the breakup of a large >100-km-diameter asteroid 8.3 Myr ago that produced the Veritas family. Using an N-body code, we tracked the dynamical evolution of ≈106 particles, 1 μm to 1 cm in diameter, from both families. We then used these results in a Monte Carlo code to determine how small particles from each population undergo collisional evolution. By computing the thermal emission of particles, we were able to compare our results with IRAS observations. Our best-fit model results suggest the Karin and Veritas family particles contribute by 5-9% in 10-60-μm wavelengths to the zodiacal cloud's brightness within 50° latitudes around the ecliptic, and by 9-15% within 10° latitudes. The high brightness of the zodiacal cloud at large latitudes suggests that it is mainly produced by particles with higher inclinations than what would be expected for asteroidal particles produced by sources in the main belt. From these results, we infer that asteroidal dust represents a smaller fraction of the zodiacal cloud than previously thought. We estimate that the total mass accreted by the Earth in Karin and Veritas particles with diameters 20-400 μm is ≈15,000-20,000 tons per year (assuming 2 g cm−3 particles density). This is ≈30-50% of the terrestrial accretion rate of cosmic material measured by the Long Duration Exposure Facility. We hypothesize that up to ≈50% of our collected interplanetary dust particles and micrometeorites may be made up of particle species from the Veritas and Karin families. The Karin family IDPs should be about as abundant as Veritas family IDPs though this ratio may change if the contribution of third, near-ecliptic source is significant. Other sources of dust and/or large impact speeds must be invoked to explain the remaining ≈50-70%. The disproportional contribution of Karin/Veritas particles to the zodiacal cloud (only 5-9%) and to the terrestrial accretion rate (30-50%) suggests that the effects of gravitational focusing by the Earth enhance the accretion rate of Karin/Veritas particles relative to those in the background zodiacal cloud. From this result and from the latitudinal brightness of the zodiacal cloud, we infer that the zodiacal cloud emission may be dominated by high-speed cometary particles, while the terrestrial impactor flux contains a major contribution from asteroidal sources. Collisions and Poynting-Robertson drift produce the size-frequency distribution (SFD) of Karin and Veritas particles that becomes increasingly steeper closer to the Sun. At 1 AU, the SFD is relatively shallow for small particle diameters D (differential slope exponent of particles with D?100 μm is ≈2.2-2.5) and steep for D?100 μm. Most of the mass at 1 AU, as well as most of the cross-sectional area, is contributed by particles with D≈100-200 μm. Similar result has been found previously for the SFD of the zodiacal cloud particles at 1 AU. The fact that the SFD of Karin/Veritas particles is similar to that of the zodiacal cloud suggests that similar processes shaped these particle populations. We estimate that there are ≈5×1024 Karin and ≈1025 Veritas family particles with D>30 μm in the Solar System today. The IRAS observation of the dust bands may be satisfactorily modeled using ‘averaged’ SFDs that are constant with semimajor axis. These SFDs are best described by a broken power-law function with differential power index α≈2.1-2.4 for D?100 μm and by α?3.5 for 100 μm?D?1 cm. The total cross-sectional surface area of Veritas particles is a factor of ≈2 larger than the surface area of the particles producing the inner dust bands. The total volumes in Karin and Veritas family particles with 1 μm<D<1 cm correspond to D=11 km and D=14 km asteroids with equivalent masses ≈1.5×1018 g and ≈3.0×1018 g, respectively (assuming 2 g cm−3 bulk density). If the size-frequency and radial distribution of particles in the zodiacal cloud were similar to those in the asteroid dust bands, we estimate that the zodiacal cloud represents ∼3×1019 g of material (in particles with 1 μm<D<1 cm) at ±10° around the ecliptic and perhaps as much as ∼1020 g in total. The later number corresponds to about a 23-km-radius sphere with 2 g cm−3 density.  相似文献   

2.
The simulated Doppler shifts of the solar Mg I Fraunhofer line produced by scattering on the solar light by asteroidal, cometary, and trans-neptunian dust particles are compared with the shifts obtained by Wisconsin H-Alpha Mapper (WHAM) spectrometer. The simulated spectra are based on the results of integrations of the orbital evolution of particles under the gravitational influence of planets, the Poynting-Robertson drag, radiation pressure, and solar wind drag. Our results demonstrate that the differences in the line centroid position in the solar elongation and in the line width averaged over the elongations for different sizes of particles are usually less than those for different sources of dust. The deviation of the derived spectral parameters for various sources of dust used in the model reached maximum at the elongation (measured eastward from the Sun) between 90° and 120°. For the future zodiacal light Doppler shifts measurements, it is important to pay a particular attention to observing at this elongation range. At the elongations of the fields observed by WHAM, the model-predicted Doppler shifts were close to each other for several scattering functions considered. Therefore the main conclusions of our paper do not depend on a scattering function and mass distribution of particles if they are reasonable. A comparison of the dependencies of the Doppler shifts on solar elongation and the mean width of the Mg I line modeled for different sources of dust with those obtained from the WHAM observations shows that the fraction of cometary particles in zodiacal dust is significant and can be dominant. Cometary particles originating inside Jupiter's orbit and particles originating beyond Jupiter's orbit (including trans-neptunian dust particles) can contribute to zodiacal dust about 1/3 each, with a possible deviation from 1/3 up to 0.1-0.2. The fraction of asteroidal dust is estimated to be ∼0.3-0.5. The mean eccentricities of zodiacal particles located at 1-2 AU from the Sun that better fit the WHAM observations are between 0.2 and 0.5, with a more probable value of about 0.3.  相似文献   

3.
William T. Reach 《Icarus》2010,209(2):848-850
Interplanetary dust particles from comets and asteroids pervade the Solar System and become temporarily trapped into orbital resonances with Earth, leading to a circumsolar dust ring. Using the unique vantage point of the Spitzer Space Telescope from its Earth-trailing solar orbit, we have measured for the first time the azimuthal structure of the Earth’s resonant dust ring. There is a relative paucity of particles within 0.1 AU of the Earth, followed by an enhancement in a cloud that is centered 0.2 AU behind Earth with a width of 0.08 AU along the Earth’s orbit. The North ecliptic pole is ∼3% brighter at 8 μm wavelength when viewed from inside the enhancement. The presence of azimuthal asymmetries in debris disks around other stars is considered strong evidence for planets. By measuring the properties of the Earth’s resonant ring, we can provide “ground truth” to models for interactions of planets and debris disks, possibly leading to improved predictions for detectability of life-bearing planets. The low amplitude of the azimuthal asymmetry in the Earth’s circumsolar ring suggests significant contributions to the zodiacal light from particles that are large (>30 μm) or have large orbital eccentricity that makes capture into mean motion resonances inefficient.  相似文献   

4.
C. Banos  S. Koutchmy 《Icarus》1973,20(1):32-41
A photograph of the zodiacal light obtained at the Pic du Midi Observatory is studied in order to measure, in absolute units, the brightness of the reinforcement, observed 15° above the ecliptic plan and in a distance of 100R⊙ from the Sun.The obtained brightnesses are compared to the brightness of the zodiacal light given by other authors for the elongations ? ? [23°, 40°]. The calibration of the image was made using the stars in the field of the image and isophotes corrected for extinction were obtained, by the method of isodensities.A discussion of the obtained results is made and the origin of the reinforcement is investigated. The mass evaluation of the interplanetary particles producing this reinforcement has been estimated and permits to us to conclude that it may be due to particles evaporated from the circumsolar region. The mechanism of transfer of momentum to the particles in orbit around the Sun by a convecting ma magnetic field is not elucidated.  相似文献   

5.
The results of modeling of the distribution of dust in the circumsolar zone are presented. The dust distribution was retrieved from observations of the line-of-sight velocities in the F-corona to the distances of 7–11 solar radii during the total eclipses of the Sun in different years: on July 31, 1981; August 11, 1991; March 29, 2006; and August 1, 2008. Comparison of the results has shown that the dust composition varies from year to year and the dust is dynamically nonuniform. In addition to the dust related to the zodiacal cloud and concentrating to the ecliptic plane, the dust of retrograde motion and the ejections and accretion in the polar regions are observed. From the results of observations of eclipses on July 31, 1981, August 11, 1991, and August 1, 2008, the east–west asymmetry in a sign of the line-of-sight velocities was detected: they are negative to the east of the Sun and positive to the west. Such distribution of the velocities is indicative of the nearecliptic orbital dust motion, whose direction coincides with that of the motion of the planets. In the course of the eclipse of March 29, 2006, almost no dynamical connection with the zodiacal cloud was found. At the same time, the direction, where the observed velocities are largest in value and opposite in sign on opposite sides of the Sun, was determined, which provides evidence of the orbital motion deviating from the ecliptic plane. The results of observations in 2006 reveal a clear genetic connection of the observed orbital motion of dust with the parent comets of the Kreutz family found near the Sun close to the eclipse date. The velocities observed near the symmetry line in the plane of the sky grow by absolute value with increasing the elongation, which may take place, if the line of sight croßses an empty zone that is free of dust. The modeling of the data of observations near the symmetry plane allowed the parameters of the dust distribution near the sublimation zone to be obtained. In 2006, the “black” cometary dust with a low albedo (A = 0.05) was observed; it showed high values of the power-law exponents in the distance distribution of the dust concentration (V = 2.2 > 1) and in the size distribution of grains (γ = 5.2 > 4.0) and a strong radiation pressure (β = 0.70–0.74). We estimated the mean radius of grains as ≈0.8–0.9 µm and the radius of the dust-free zone as ≈9.1–9.2 solar radii. The latter corresponds to the distances, where the low-melt components of olivines and pyroxenes disintegrate. In 2008, the observed zodiacal dust concentrating to the ecliptic plane demonstrated the canonical parameters: A = 0.1–0.2, V ≈ 1, ß ≈ 0, γ = 4.0, the mean radii of grains were 0.9–1.2 µm, and the radius of the dust-free zone was 7.0–7.6 solar radii.  相似文献   

6.
Model calculations are used to determine the location of interplanetary dust particles that contribute most of the brightness of the zodiacal light as seen from Earth, in and out of the ecliptic plane and in the F-corona. It is found that as one observes in Increasing ecliptic latitude (β), the distance to the Earth decreases for dust contributing equal fractions to the line-of-sight brightness. This and other results will help in the analysis of: (1) structures in the observed brightness of the zodiacal light, (2) bands such as those observed by IRAS, (3) temporal variations in the brightness of the zodiacal light, (4) observations of the photometric axis, and (5) past and future observations of the F-corona.  相似文献   

7.
From published ground-base, spacecraft, and rocket photometry and polarimetry of the zodiacal light, a number of optical and physical parameters have been derived. It was assumed that the number density, mean particle size, and albedo vary with heliocentric distance, and shown that average individual interplanetary particles have a small but definite opposition effect, a mean single-scattering albedo in the V band at 1-AU heliocentric distance of 0.09 ± 0.01, and a zero-phase geometric albedo of 0.04. Modeled by a power law, both albedos decrease with increasing heliocentric distance as r?0.54. The corresponding exponents for changes in mean particle size and number density are related in a simple way. The median orbital inclination of zodiacal light particles with respect to the ecliptic is 12°, close to the observed median value for faint asteroids and short-period comets. Furthermore, the color of dust particles and its variation with solar phase angle closely resemble those of C asteroids. These findings are, at least, consistent with the zodiacal cloud originating primarily from collisions among asteroids. Finally, a value of ?1018?ErmE g was derived for the mass of the zodiacal cloud, where ?E is the mean particle radius (in micrometers) at 1-AU-heliocentric distance. For extinction in the ecliptic, Δm = 10?5??12mag was obtained, where ? is the solar elongation in degrees.  相似文献   

8.
Colour models of the zodiacal light in the ecliptic have been calculated for both dielectric and metallic particles in the sub-micron and micron size range. Two colour ratios were computed, a blue ratio Cb (0.40 μm, 0.53 μm) and a red ratio, either Cr (0.82 μm, 0.53 μm) or Cr' (0.71 μm, 0.53 μm). The models with a size distribution ∝s−2.5ds generally show a colour close to the solar colour and almost independent of elongation. Especially in the blue colour ratio there is generally no significant dependence on the lower cutoff size (0.1–1 μm). The main feature of absorbing particles is a reddening at small elongations. The models for size distributions ∝s−4ds show larger departures from solar colour and more variation with model parameters. Colour measurements, including red and near infra-red, therefore are useful to distinguish between flat and steep size spectra and to verify the presence of slightly absorbing particles.  相似文献   

9.
We have performed the calculations of the orbital evolution of dust particles from volcanic glass (p-obsidian), basalt, astrosilicate, olivine, and pyroxene in the sublimation zone near the Sun. The sublimation (evaporation) rate is determined by the temperature of dust particles depending on their radius, material, and distance to the Sun. All practically important parameters that characterize the interaction of spherical dust particles with the radiation are calculated using the Mie theory. The influence of radiation and solar wind pressure, as well as the Poynting–Robertson drag force effects on the dust dynamics, are also taken into account. According to the observations (Shestakova and Demchenko, 2016), the boundary of the dust-free zone is 7.0–7.6 solar radii for standard particles of the zodiacal cloud and 9.1–9.2 solar radii for cometary particles. The closest agreement is obtained for basalt particles and certain kinds of olivine, pyroxene, and volcanic glass.  相似文献   

10.
The relative proportions of asteroidal and cometary materials in the zodiacal cloud is an ongoing debate. The determination of the asteroidal component is constrained through the study of the Solar System dust bands (the fine-structure component superimposed on the broad background cloud), since they have been confidently linked to specific, young, asteroid families in the main belt. The disruptions that produce these families also result in the injection of dust into the cloud and thus hold the key to determining at least a minimum value for the asteroidal contribution to the zodiacal cloud. There are currently known to be at least three dust band pairs, one at approximately 9.35° associated with the Veritas family and two central band pairs near the ecliptic, one of which is associated with the Karin subcluster of the Koronis family. Through careful co-adding of almost all the pole-to-pole intensity scans in the mid-infrared wavebands of the Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS) data set, we find strong evidence for a partial Solar System dust band, that is, a very young dust band in the process of formation, at approximately 17° latitude. We think this is a confirmation of the M/N partial band pair first suggested by Sykes [1988. IRAS observations of extended zodiacal structures. Astrophys. J. 334, L55-L58]. The new dust band appears at some but not all ecliptic longitudes, as expected for a young, partially formed dust band. We present preliminary modeling of the new, partial dust band which allows us to put constraints on the age of the disruption event, the inclination and node of the parent body at the time of disruption, and the quantity of dust injected into the zodiacal cloud.  相似文献   

11.
Some considerations about the zodiacal light brightness integral from the stand point of the theory of integral equations are made. It is shown that for observation directions confined to a plane perpendicular to the ecliptic and passing through the Sun, the Z.L. brightness integral can be formally considered as a first kind integral equation of Volterra type (V.I.E.). In a second step, this equation is transformed into a V.I.E. of the second kind, from which, and under certain assumptions, the spatial distribution of dust out of the ecliptic is obtained.  相似文献   

12.
Hanner  M. S.  Gehrz  R. D.  Harker  D. E.  Hayward  T. L.  Lynch  D. K.  Mason  C. C.  Russell  R. W.  Williams  D. M.  Wooden  D. H.  Woodward  C. E. 《Earth, Moon, and Planets》1997,79(1-3):247-264
The dust coma of comet Hale-Bopp was observed in the thermal infrared over a wide range in solar heating (R = 4.9–0.9 AU) and over the full wavelength range from 3 μm to 160 μm. Unusual early activity produced an extensive coma containing small warm refractory grains; already at 4.9 AU, the 10 μm silicate emission feature was strong and the color temperature was 30% above the equilibrium blackbody temperature. Near perihelion the high color temperature, strong silicate feature, and high albedo indicated a smaller mean grain size than in other comets. The 8–13 μm spectra revealed a silicate emission feature similar in shape to that seen in P/Halley and several new and long period comets. Detailed spectral structure in the feature was consistent over time and with different instruments; the main peaks occur at 9.3, 10.0 and 11.2 μm. These peaks can be identified with olivine and pyroxene minerals, linking the comet dust to the anhydrous chondritic aggregate interplanetary dust particles. Spectra at 16–40 μm taken with the ISO SWS displayed pronounced emission peaks due to Mg-rich crystalline olivine, consistent with the 11.2 μm peak. This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

13.
The Earth's extraterrestrial dust flux includes a wide variety of dust particles that include FeNi metallic grains. During their atmospheric entry iron micrometeoroids melt and oxidize to form cosmic spherules termed I‐type spherules. These particles are chemically resistant and readily collected by magnetic separation and are thus the most likely micrometeorites to be recovered from modern and ancient sediments. Understanding their behavior during atmospheric entry is crucial in constraining their abundance relative to other particle types and the nature of the zodiacal dust population at 1 AU. This article presents numerical simulations of the atmospheric entry heating of iron meteoroids to investigate the abundance and nature of these materials. The results indicate that iron micrometeoroids experience peak temperatures 300–800 K higher than silicate particles explaining the rarity of unmelted iron particles which can only be present at sizes of <50 μm. The lower evaporation rates of liquid iron oxide leads to greater survival of iron particles compared with silicates, which enhances their abundance among micrometeorites by a factor of 2. The abundance of I‐types is shown to be broadly consistent with the abundance and size of metal in ordinary chondrites and the current day flux of ordinary chondrite‐derived MMs arriving at Earth. Furthermore, carbonaceous asteroids and cometary dust are suggested to make negligible contributions to the I‐type spherule flux. Events involving such objects, therefore, cannot be recognized from I‐type spherule abundances in the geological record.  相似文献   

14.
The problem of the stability of the zodiacal cloud is scrutinized. The central idea of the paper sticks in the theoretical treatment of the action of the solar electromagnetic radiation on small interplanetary dust particles (IDPs). It is suggested that the virtual problem of the (in-)stability of the zodiacal cloud originated from the physically incorrect application of the Poynting-Robertson effect on IDPs. Real particles are not of spherical shape and so the braking acceleration is not proportional to -v/c. Depending on the shape (and other optical properties) of the particle, also spiralling outward from the Sun may occur.  相似文献   

15.
The calcium‐aluminum‐rich inclusions (CAIs) found in chondritic meteorites are probably the oldest solar system solids, dating back to 4567.30 ± 0.16 million years ago. They are thought to have formed in the protosolar nebula within a few astronomical units of the Sun, and at a temperature of around 1300 K. The Stardust mission found evidence of CAI‐like material in samples recovered from comet Wild 2. The appearance of CAIs in comets, which are thought to be formed at lower temperatures and larger distances from the Sun, is only explicable if some mechanism allows the efficient transfer of such objects from the inner solar nebula to the outer solar nebula. Such mechanisms have been proposed such as an X‐wind or turbulence. In this work, particles collected from within the coma of comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko are examined for compositional evidence of the presence of CAIs. COSIMA (the Cometary Secondary Ion Mass Analyzer) uses secondary ion mass spectrometry to analyze the composition of cometary dust captured on metal targets. While CAIs can have a radius of centimeters, they are more typically a few hundred microns in size, and can be smaller than 1 μm, so it is conceivable that particles visible on COSIMA targets (ranging in size from about 10 μm to hundreds of microns) could contain CAIs. Using a peak fitting technique, the composition of a set of 13 particles was studied, looking for material rich in both calcium and aluminum. One such particle was found.  相似文献   

16.
《Icarus》1987,72(3):582-592
Numerical simulations of the trajectories of over 200 30-μm-radius dust particles released by Comet P/Encke were designed to study the evolution and redistribution of orbital elements as the dust particles spiral in toward the Sun. The dust assumes Jupiter crossing orbits immediately after release due to radiation pressure, while the comet's orbit remains inside Jupiter's orbital path. By the time the dust particles have spiraled past Jupiter, information on their origin from P/Encke is erased from the distribution in orbital elements. The primary objective of this study is to compare the observed spatial distribution of zodiacal/interplanetary dust with that of the model cloud inside Jupiter's orbit. The observed location of the plane of maximum dust density “symmetry plane” of the zodiacal cloud is compared to a least-square-fit plane of the model cloud. A clear correlation between the two planes is found. The variation of the observed inclination and nodes with heliocentric distance agrees also, at least qualitatively, with that found in the model cloud. The hypothesis that short-period comets may have contributed in a major way to the zodiacal cloud is compatible with these results. The study is directly relevant to, and supports, Whipple's suggestion that Comet P/Encke may have been a major source to the zodiacal cloud.  相似文献   

17.
The problem of electromagnetic perturbations of charged dust particle orbits in interplanetary space has been re-examined in the light of our better understanding of the large scale spatial and temporal interplanetary plasma and field topology. Using both analytical and numerical solutions for particle propagation it was shown that: (1) stochastic variations induced by electromagnetic forces are unimportant for the zodiacal dust cloud except for the lowest masses, (2) systemetic variations in orbit inclinations are unimportant if orbital radii are larger than 10 a.u. This is due to the solar cycle variation in magnetic polarity which tends to cancel out systematic effects, (3) systematic variations in orbital parameters (inclination, longitude of ascending node, longitude of perihel) induced by electromagnetic forces inside 1 a.u. tend to shift the plane of symmetry of the zodiacal dust cloud somewhat towards the solar magnetic equatorial plane, (4) inside 0.3 a.u. there is a possibility that dust particles may enter a region of “magnetically resonant” orbits for some time. Changes in orbit parameters are then correspondingly enhanced, (5) the observed similarity of the plane of symmetry of zodiacal light with the solar equatorial plane may be the effect of the interaction of charged interplanetary dust particles with the interplanetary magnetic field. Numerical orbit calculation of dust particles show that one of the results of this interaction is the rotation of the orbit plane about the solar rotational axis.  相似文献   

18.
《Planetary and Space Science》1999,47(3-4):363-383
The Ulysses spacecraft is orbiting the Sun on a highly inclined ellipse (i = 79°). After its Jupiter flyby in 1992 at a heliocentric distance of 5.4 AU, the spacecraftreapproached the inner solar system, flew over the Suns south polar region in September 1994,crossed the ecliptic plane at a distance of 1.3 AU in March 1995, and flew over the Suns northpolar region in July 1995. We report on dust impact data obtained with the dust detector onboardUlysses between January 1993 and December 1995. We publish and analyse the complete dataset of 509 recorded impacts of dust particles with masses between 10−16 g–10−7 g. Together with 968 dust impacts from launch until the end of 1992 published earlier (Grün et al., 1995c), information about 1477 particles detected with theUlysses sensor between October 1990 and December 1995 is now available. The impact ratemeasured between 1993 and 1995 stayed relatively constant at about 0.4 impacts per day andvaried by less than a factor of ten. Most of the impacts recorded outside about 3.5 AU arecompatible with particles of interstellar origin. Two populations of interplanetary particles havebeen recognized: big micrometer-sized particles close to the ecliptic plane and smallsub-micrometer-sized particles at high ecliptic latitudes. The observed impact rate is comparedwith a model for the flux of interstellar dust particles which gives relatively good agreement withthe observed impact rate. No change in the instruments noise characteristics or degradation of thechanneltron could be revealed during the three-year period.  相似文献   

19.
The O2 dayglow at 1.27 μm is formed by high-altitude ozone on Mars and is a sensitive tracer of Mars photochemistry. Mapping of this dayglow using the IRTF/CSHELL long-slit spectrograph requires the extraction of weak emission lines against a strong continuum of the reflected solar light. Some new tools are suggested to improve the data processing. The observed O2 dayglow intensities at LS=67°, 112°, 148°, and 173° show a decrease from late spring (aphelion) to fall equinox by a factor of ≈5 at low latitudes (±30°). This decrease agrees with that predicted by a model of Clancy and Nair (1996, J. Geophys. Res. 101 (12) 12785-12790), although the dayglow intensities are weaker than those based on that model. The measured dayglow variations with latitude are rather low at LS=67°, 112°, and 148° and unexpectedly high at 173°. The dayglow intensity peaks near noon and is smaller at 9:00 and 16:30 LT by a factor of 2. Some data on the ozone profile near aphelion are obtained from a combination of the dayglow and ozone observations. It is hardly possible to detect the O2 night airglow at 1.27 μm on Mars using the existing ground-based and on-orbit instruments. The O2 dayglow intensity as a function of latitude and season from aphelion to fall equinox has been obtained. Our goal is to extend this distribution to the full martian year and get a database for Mars photochemistry to complement the MGS/TES observations of water vapor, atmospheric temperature, and dust and ice aerosol.  相似文献   

20.
We consider the infrared brightness of a flattened comet belt beyond the orbit of Neptune using a disk-like model with a power-law density distribution of comets. We compare this spectrum with the emission from a model zodiacal dust cloud in the ecliptic and with published IRAS data and present some consequences of dust in the comet belt.  相似文献   

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