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Role of Auroral and Photoelectrons on the Abundances of Methane and Ammonia in the Coma of Comet Halley

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A comparative study of ionization rates due to (i) solar EUV radiation, (ii) photoelectrons, and (iii) auroral electrons, is carried out on the ionosphere of Comet Halley for various ionic species. It is found that, in the vicinity of the ionization peak, the photoelectron impact ionization rate is higher than the photoionization rate. However, at all radial distances auroral electron impact ionization is always greater than either of the other two. Coupled continuity equations for chemical steady state conditions are solved to compute the densities of water group ions (H3O+, H2O+, OH+, H+), ammonia group ions (NH+4, NH+3, NH+2, NH+), and methane group ions (CH+5, CH+4, CH+3, CH+2). Ratios of masses (19/18, 17/18, 15/18) are determined and compared with Giotto ion mass spectrometer (IMS) data to derive the relative abundances of NH3 and CH4 in the coma of Comet Halley. The effects of different ionization sources, with varying NH3 and CH4 abundances, on the ratio profiles and on the ion-electron densities are studied in detail. To find a reasonable fit to all of the Giotto measured ratio data, about 1.5 ± 0.1% NH3 and 0.5 ± 0.1% CH4 (relative to H2O) are required in "normal" ionization conditions. In "enhanced" ionization conditions (when the auroral electron source is added to the solar EUV and photoelectron sources of ionization) a smaller concentration of NH3 is required. However, the Giotto IMS data (because of large error bars) do not provide sufficient resolution to distinguish the effects of enhanced ionization in terms of the required abundances of NH3 and CH4. The photoelectron ionization source is found to play a significant role in determining the ion densities in cometary ionospheres. We have also examined the effect of using different sets of dissociative recombination rates, taking a constant electron temperature profile (Te = 340.0 K), including an additional loss mechanism for H3O ions, and using different dissociative ionization cross sections in e-H2O collisions. © 1993 by Academic Press, Inc.

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