Ammonium salts are a reservoir of nitrogen on a cometary nucleus and possibly on some asteroids [EPA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2003.06034


The measured nitrogen-to-carbon ratio in comets is lower than for the Sun, a discrepancy which could be alleviated if there is an unknown reservoir of nitrogen in comets. The nucleus of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko exhibits an unidentified broad spectral reflectance feature around 3.2 micrometers, which is ubiquitous across its surface. On the basis of laboratory experiments, we attribute this absorption band to ammonium salts mixed with dust on the surface. The depth of the band indicates that semivolatile ammonium salts are a substantial reservoir of nitrogen in the comet, potentially dominating over refractory organic matter and more volatile species. Similar absorption features appear in the spectra of some asteroids, implying a compositional link between asteroids, comets, and the parent interstellar cloud.

Read this paper on arXiv…

O. Poch, I. Istiqomah, E. Quirico, et. al.
Mon, 16 Mar 20
38/57

Comments: Main manuscript and Supplementary material document, Accepted for publication in Science on February 14, 2020