Published April 2023 | Version Published
Journal Article Open

Sodium Brightening of (3200) Phaethon near Perihelion

  • 1. ROR icon California Institute of Technology
  • 2. ROR icon United States Naval Research Laboratory
  • 3. ROR icon University of Maryland, College Park
  • 4. ROR icon Boston University
  • 5. ROR icon United States Naval Academy

Abstract

Sunskirting asteroid (3200) Phaethon has been repeatedly observed in Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory (STEREO) Heliospheric Imager 1 (HI1) imagery to anomalously brighten and produce an antisunward tail for a few days near each perihelion passage, phenomena previously attributed to the ejection of micron-sized dust grains. Color imaging by the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) Large Angle Spectrometric Coronagraph (LASCO) during the 2022 May apparition indicates that the observed brightening and tail development instead capture the release of sodium atoms, which resonantly fluoresce at the 589.0/589.6 nm D lines. While HI1's design bandpass nominally excludes the D lines, filter degradation has substantially increased its D line sensitivity, as quantified by the brightness of Mercury's sodium tail in HI1 imagery. Furthermore, the expected fluorescence efficiency and acceleration of sodium atoms under solar radiation readily reproduce both the photometric and morphological behaviors observed by LASCO and HI1 during the 2022 apparition and the 17 earlier apparitions since 1997. This finding connects Phaethon to the broader population of sunskirting and sungrazing comets observed by SOHO, which often also exhibit bright sodium emission with minimal visible dust, but distinguishes it from other sunskirting asteroids without detectable sodium production under comparable solar heating. These differences may reflect variations in the degree of sodium depletion of near-surface material and thus the extent and/or timing of any past or present resurfacing activity.

Additional Information

© 2023. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society. Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 licence. Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOI. We thank Kevin Schenk (NASA/GSFC) and the SOHO mission operations team for carrying out our special observing sequence targeting Phaethon with LASCO, Chris Scott (Reading) for bringing the shift in the HI1 bandpass to our attention, Joe Masiero (Caltech/IPAC) for useful discussions on thermal desorption, and Gregg Hallinan (Caltech) for feedback and support. We also thank the anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments and suggestions toward improving this work. K.B. was supported by the NASA-funded Sungrazer Project. Q.Y. was supported by STScI grant HST-GO-15357 and NASA program 80NSSC22K0772. M.M.K. was supported by NASA program 80HQTR20T0092. C.S. acknowledges support from NASA programs 80NSSC19K0790 and 80NSSC22K1303. SOHO is a project of international cooperation between ESA and NASA. Facilities: SOHO (LASCO) - , STEREO (HI1) - . Software: Astropy (Astropy Collaboration et al. 2022), Astroquery (Ginsburg et al. 2019), emcee (Foreman-Mackey et al. 2013), Matplotlib (Hunter 2007), NumPy (Van Der Walt et al. 2011), sbpy (Mommert et al. 2019), SciPy (Virtanen et al. 2020).

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Additional details

Identifiers

Eprint ID
121368
Resolver ID
CaltechAUTHORS:20230510-349443100.2

Related works

Describes
10.3847/PSJ/acc866 (DOI)

Funding

NASA
HST-GO-15357
NASA
80NSSC22K0772
NASA
80HQTR20T0092
NASA
80NSSC19K0790
NASA
80NSSC22K1303

Dates

Created
2023-05-16
Created from EPrint's datestamp field
Updated
2023-05-16
Created from EPrint's last_modified field