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On the Cometary Hydrogen Coma and Far UV Emission
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 February 2018
Extract
Comet Tago-Sato-Kosaka (1969 IX, hereafter TSK) was the first medium bright comet passing by in the era of ultraviolet satellites. The Orbiting Astronomical Observatory (OAO-2), observed in January 1970 the strong Lyman alpha signal at 1216 A which led to the first detection of cometary hydrogen. The peak signal in the photometer field-of-view (FOV) of 10′ diameter was about 70 kR (Code et. al , 1970) The resonance scattering emission of hydrogen was optically thick in the central part of the coma. A rocket experiment of Jenkins and Wingert (1972) using an objective grating spectrograph confirmed the OAO-2 observations Later in Spring 1970 comet Bennett (1970 II) was observed in Lα by OAO-2 and by two photometers onboard the Orbiting Heophysical Observatory (0G0-5) (Bertaux and Blamont, 1970; Keller and Thomas, 1973).
- Type
- Part I
- Information
- International Astronomical Union Colloquium , Volume 25 , Issue Part1: The Study of Comets , 1976 , pp. 287 - 314
- Copyright
- Copyright © NASA 1976