A Monte Carlo code to compute energy fluxes in cometary nuclei

DOI: 
10.1006/icar.2001.6806
Publication date: 
01/04/2002
Main author: 
Moreno F.
IAA authors: 
Moreno F.;Ortiz J.L.
Authors: 
Moreno F., Muoz O., López-Moreno J.J., Molina A., Ortiz J.L.
Journal: 
Icarus
Publication type: 
Article
Volume: 
156
Pages: 
474-484
Number: 
Abstract: 
A Monte Carlo model designed to compute both the input and output radiation fields from spherical-shell cometary atmospheres has been developed. The code is an improved version of that by H. Salo (1988, Icarus 76, 253-269); it includes the computation of the full Stokes vector and can compute both the input fluxes impinging on the nucleus surface and the output radiation. This will have specific applications for the near-nucleus photometry, polarimetry, and imaging data collection planned in the near future from space probes. After carrying out some validation tests of the code, we consider here the effects of including the full 4 × 4 scattering matrix in the calculations of the radiative flux impinging on cometary nuclei. As input to the code we used realistic phase matrices derived by fitting the observed behavior of the linear polarization as a function of phase angle. The observed single scattering linear polarization phase curves of comets are fairly well represented by a mixture of magnesium-rich olivine particles and small carbonaceous particles. The input matrix of the code is thus given by the phase matrix for olivine as obtained in the laboratory plus a variable scattering fraction phase matrix for absorbing carbonaceous particles. These fractions are 3.5% for Comet Halley and 6% for Comet Hale-Bopp, the comet with the highest percentage of all those observed. The errors in the total input flux impinging on the nucleus surface caused by neglecting polarization are found to be within 10% for the full range of solar zenith angles. Additional tests on the resulting linear polarization of the light emerging from cometary nuclei in near-nucleus observation conditions at a variety of coma optical thicknesses show that the polarization phase curves do not experience any significant changes for optical thicknesses τ ≳ 0.25 and Halley-like surface albedo, except near 90° phase angle. © 2002 Elsevier Science (USA).
Database: 
WOK
SCOPUS
Keywords: 
Comets; Polarimetry; Radiative transfer