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Saturday, April 17, 2010

 

Wait! Mercury Has a Tail (and an astreoid occultation)






A few days ago I posted some images of Mercury with a tail as seen in the STEREO spacecraft H1b imager. But I realised that the image of the Mercury tail in the H1a imager I referred too was pretty rubbish. So I've now posted one of my more recent images. The image on the right is Mercury as seen in the H1a imager on January 16 of 2010.

For contrast I've put the image from the H1b imager of 8 April on the right. The tail in the H1a imager is better on the 17th, but I've shown the 16th because of a rather unusual circumstance. On the 16th an asteroid passes behind Mercury, so you get a tail and an asteroidal occultation in the same picture. The tail (it points to the left in the lefthand image, and right in the righthand image, the vertical bar is an imager artefact) is easier to see in the animations (see below) which show the asteroid shooting behind Mercury. I haven't identified the asteroid yet, the horizons ephemeris for Mercury from H1a seems off, but I'll sort it out eventually. Update: The asteroid is 88 Thisbe.

Image Credit: Center for Space Physics, Boston University Mercury as seen from Earth in narrow band sodium light.

As I noted in the last article, we are pretty convinced the tail we're seeing is the sodium tail of Mercury, where the solar wind blasts sodium ions off Mercury's surface. From the STEREO imagers, you can only see the tail when Mercury is at inferior conjunction, when most of Mercury's surface is dark, and it's light doesn't overwhelm the image. However, inferior conjunction as seen from Earth is not the same for the STEREO ahead and behind craft. Mercury was at inferior conjunction on 5 January, but it was not until 16-17 January the Mercury was close to that position as seen from STEREO ahead. Similarly, inferior conjunction is not due to be seen from Earth until April 29, but was seen at this position on the 8th from the STEREO behind space craft. Of course, being stupid I didn't realise this apsect of the geometry, and my surveys to find the tail in H1b failed. Once Jiangao Ruan spotted the H1b tail, I finally realise what had been wrong.




Mercury as seen from STEREO A (ahead) on January 16 and STEREO B (behind) on April 8.

As well as the right geometry from the point of view of the spacecraft being needed to see the tail, the tail is most intense when Mercury is at Perihelion (ie closest to the Sun), Mercury was about a month from aphelion on the 16th of January, and was 8 days past Perihelion on the 8th of April. You can see the tail is more distinct in the image from the 8th than the 16th. The stereoimagers let only 5% of the sodium spectrum through, which is enough to see the tails, but not enough for them to be prominent.

You can download an avi of Mercury showing the tail on 16 January 2010 with the astreiod shooting behind Mercury (caution 2.4 Mb) here and a smaller version (0.2 Mb) here. Or you can play the YouTube video below, it's a bit jerky and hard to see the asteroid though.

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Comments:
Gidday ian, nice follow up. The tail is very good in january. Can not pick which asteroid it is, whats your choice here. rgds Cometal
 
G'Day Al

I think that 88 Thisbe is the best bet at the moment. I'll be able to tell shorthly.

Hey, you never posted images of your bright comet from the 17th-21st January, do you mind if I post this? The animation shows some nice tail action.
 
Yep, 88 Thisbe it is!
 
Starry night agrees this with this asteroid choice. good work. You can post any comet images as you like, if you do the hard work of image processing :) rgds Al
 
For given values of the word "properly". :-)

I've looked over the 13 April H2b images, didn't see any comet. I assume from the lack of joyous postings on stereohunter it's not in the images from the 12th of 14th either?
 
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