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A&A 471, 321-329 (2007)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20077575
The dust trail complex of comet 79P/du Toit-Hartley and meteor outbursts at Mars
A. A. Christou1, J. Vaubaillon2, and P. Withers31 Armagh Observatory, College Hill, Armagh BT61 9DG, Northern Ireland, UK
e-mail: aac@star.arm.ac.uk
2 Institut de Mécanique Céleste et de Calcul des Ephémérides, Observatoire de Paris, 77 Avenue Denfert-Rochereau, 75014 Paris, France
e-mail: vaubaill@imcce.fr
3 Center for Space Physics, Boston University, 725 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, MA 02215, USA
e-mail: withers@bu.edu
(Received 30 March 2007 / Accepted 28 May 2007)
Abstract
Aims.Meteoroid trails ejected during past perihelion
passages of the Mars-orbit-intersecting comet 79P/du Toit-Hartley
have the potential of generating meteor outbursts in the Martian
atmosphere. Depending on timing and intensity, the effects of these
outbursts may be detectable by instrumentation operating in the
vicinity of Mars. We aim to
generate predictions for meteor activity in the martian atmosphere
related to that comet; to search for evidence, in planetary
mission data, that such activity took place; and to make predictions
for potentially detectable future activity.
Methods.We have modelled the stream by integrating numerically the states of
particle ensembles, each ensemble representing a trail of meteoroids
ejected from the comet during 39 perihelion passages from 1803,
and propagated them forward in time, concentrating on those particles
that physically approach Mars in the recent past and near future.
Results.We find several instances where meteor outbursts of low to moderate
intensity may have taken place at Mars since 1997. A search through Mars
Global Surveyor (MGS) radio science data during two periods in 2003 and 2005
when data coverage was available showed that a plasma layer did indeed
form in the martian ionosphere for a period of a few hours in April 2003 as a direct
consequence of the predicted outburst. The apparent failure to
identify such an event in 2005 could be due to those meteoroids
ablating lower in the atmosphere or that the cometary dust follows a
different particle size distribution than what was assumed.
Our study highlights the need for further theoretical modelling of the response of the
martian ionosphere to a time-variable meteoroid flux, observations of the comet itself
and, most importantly, regular monitoring of the martian ionosphere during future outbursts
predicted by our model.
Key words: comets: individual: 79P/du Toit-Hartley -- meteors, meteoroids -- planets and satellites: individual: Mars
© ESO 2007
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