Lack of Emissions
European Southern Observatory
http://www.eso.org/
A Spectrum of 
Comet Hale-Bopp
11 September 1995
 
  - Comet Hale-Bopp is known to possess a bright coma, despite its large distance from 
    the Sun, almost 1,000 million km.  Observations have shown that this coma consists of 
    dust particles of different sizes that have been ejected from the comet's nucleus.
  - But what is causing this outflow of the dust?  Most comet specialists believe that a particular 
    gas must act as the "agent".  When molecules evaporate from the solids in the nucleus, either due 
    to the heating action of the infalling sunlight, or because of some unknown inner energy-
    producing mechanism, then they take dust particles along and push them outwards.  Although we 
    may not see the gaseous molecules that quickly diffuse into the surrounding space, we do observe 
    the reflection of the sunlight from the much larger, slower moving dust particles.
 
  - Astronomers would like to know which gas is responsible for the great amount of 
    dust, now observed around the nucleus of Comet Hale-Bopp. This would also prove the 
    presence of such material in the nucleus.
  - Comets are believed to consist mostly of water ice (H2O), but the temperature at the present 
    distance from the Sun (~ 125 K, or -150 C) is too low for any considerable amount of water ice to 
    evaporate.  Thus water molecules are unlikely to be involved in this process. Cyanic 
    acid (HCN), carbon monoxide (CO) or carbon dioxide (CO2) are more likely 
    candidates.
  - However, when they lave the nucleus, these molecules are broken down and/or ionized rather 
    quickly by the sunlight and/or the solar wind particles. Their presence may instead be indicated 
    by the detection of CN (radical) and CO+ (ion). Both of these molecules emit radiation in the 
    ultraviolet part of the spectrum; CN at ~ 3883 A (388.3 nm) and CO+ at ~ 4010 and ~ 4260 A, 
    respectively. One way to decide which gas has caused the observed dust outflow is therefore to 
    obtain a spectrum of Comet Hale-Bopp covering this spectral region.
  - Press Photo 27/95 [87K] shows such a spectrum, after it has been subjected to preliminary 
    image processing.  It is based on a Hale-Bopp spectrum, obtained in the morning of 
    September 5, 1995, by visiting astronomer Birgitta Nordström (Copenhagen 
    University Observatory, Denmark) with a CCD on the Boller & Chivens spectrograph at the ESO 
    1.5-metre telescope at La Silla. The exposure lasted 30 minutes and the slit 
    was placed in the East-West direction. Hector Vega (ESO) assisted during this 
    observation.
  - This file was transmitted together with the calibration files to Heike Rauer (Observatoire de 
    Meudon, Paris, France), who performed a provisional reduction.  In this process, the instrument and sky 
    artifacts were removed and the comet spectrum was divided with the spectrum of a G0 star, whose 
    spectrum closely ressembles that of the Sun.  This procedure removes as far as possible the contribution 
    from the sunlight reflected of the cometary dust and enhances any surplus emission, for instance from the 
    above mentioned gas molecules.
  - The spectrum covers the region from about 3848 A (left) to 4841  A (right).  The scale is linear 
    and the pixel size in the direction of dispersion is 3 A.  A few vertical, dark lines are seen, for 
    instance at 3880, 3933, 3969, 4034 and 4695 A; they are caused by incomplete subtraction of the 
    sky spectrum, recorded simultaneously.
 
  - As can be seen, there is no sign of CN and CO+ emission lines at the indicated 
    wavelengths in this spectrum. They would have shown up as white lines, extending 
    above and below the otherwise "flat" spectrum.  The sensitivity of this observation was apparently 
    not sufficient to detect such emissions, if present at all.  Indeed, this equipment was not 
    optimized for this particular kind of observation which was made in the course of another 
    observing programme, concerned with galactic stars of low metal abundance.
  - This negative result may be interpreted in several ways.  Either there has always been very 
    little gas of this type in Comet Hale-Bopp and another, so far unknown agent is active, or the gaseous 
    outflow has stopped in the meantime.  Other observations are needed to cast more light on this 
    question.
European Southern Observatory
http://www.eso.org/
25 August 
1995
  - The ESO observations are of many different types and have involved many observers.  At the 
    15-metre Swedish-ESO Submillimetre Telescope (SEST), Albert Nummelin, Anne-Marie 
    Lagrange and Thierry Forveille searched on August 3-4 and 9-10 for emissions from 
    the CO molecule. According to one theory, CO gas may possibly be the driving agent 
    that is responsible for `lifting' dust particles off a comet's nucleus when it is more than about 750 
    million kilometres from the Sun. However, no emission from CO was seen to 
    the sensitivity limit of these observations, thus placing important constraints on the proposed 
    mechanism.
 
  - Normally, CN is one of the first gaseous molecules to be detected in the coma of 
    comets approaching the Sun. For instance, in Comet Halley, emissions from CN were first seen 
    at a heliocentric distance of about 725 million kilometres.  It would therefore be of great interest to learn 
    whether CN is already now present in the coma of Comet Hale-Bopp. Spectroscopic observations 
    with the ESO 1.5-metre telescope were performed by Anne-Marie Lagrange, Jean Luc Beuzit, 
    Stephane Guisard and Pierpaolo Bonfanti on August 3-4 and 9-10. They have now been reduced 
    and do not show any such emission. At the present distance of the comet from the Sun, the 
    temperature is too low for water ice (the major component of cometary nuclei) to evaporate efficiently, 
    and with the non-detection of CO and CN, the driving gas that has produced the well visible 
    dust cloud around the nucleus of Comet Hale-Bopp is still unknown.