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Observations of Disintegrating Long-Period Comet C/2019 Y4 (ATLAS) -- A Sibling of C/1844 Y1 (Great Comet) (2004.10990v2)

Published 23 Apr 2020 in astro-ph.EP

Abstract: We present a study of C/2019 Y4 (ATLAS) using Sloan $gri$ observations from mid-January to early April 2020. During this timespan, the comet brightened with a growth in the effective cross-section of $\left(2.0 \pm 0.1 \right) \times 10{2}$ m${2}$ s${-1}$ from the beginning to $\sim$70 d preperihelion in late March 2020, followed by a brightness fade and the comet gradually losing the central condensation. Meanwhile, the comet became progressively bluer, and was even bluer than the Sun ($g - r \approx 0.2$) when the brightness peaked, likely due to activation of subterranean fresh volatiles exposed to sunlight. With the tailward-bias corrected astrometry we found an enormous radial nongravitational parameter, $A_{1} = \left(+2.25 \pm 0.13\right) \times 10{-7}$ au d${-2}$ in the heliocentric motion of the comet. Taking all of these finds into consideration, we conclude that the comet has disintegrated since mid-March 2020. By no means was the split new to the comet, as we quantified that the comet had undergone another split event around last perihelion $\sim$5 kyr ago, during which its sibling C/1844 Y1 (Great Comet) was produced, with the in-plane component of the separation velocity $\gtrsim$1 m s${-1}$. We constrained that the nucleus of C/2019 Y4 before disintegration was $\gtrsim$60 m in radius, and has been protractedly ejecting dust grains of $\sim$10-40 $\mu$m (assuming dust bulk density 0.5 g cm${-3}$) with ejection speed $\sim$30 m s${-1}$ in early March 2020 and increased to $\sim$80 m s${-1}$ towards the end of the month for grains of $\sim$10 $\mu$m.

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