Comet dust refers to
cosmic dust
Cosmic dustalso called extraterrestrial dust, space dust, or star dustis dust that occurs in outer space or has fallen onto Earth. Most cosmic dust particles measure between a few molecules and , such as micrometeoroids (30 μm). Cosmic dust can ...
that originates from a
comet
A comet is an icy, small Solar System body that warms and begins to release gases when passing close to the Sun, a process called outgassing. This produces an extended, gravitationally unbound atmosphere or Coma (cometary), coma surrounding ...
. Comet dust can provide clues to comets' origin. When the
Earth
Earth is the third planet from the Sun and the only astronomical object known to Planetary habitability, harbor life. This is enabled by Earth being an ocean world, the only one in the Solar System sustaining liquid surface water. Almost all ...
passes through a comet dust trail, it can produce a
meteor shower
A meteor shower is a celestial event in which a number of meteors are observed to radiate, or originate, from one point in the night sky. These meteors are caused by streams of cosmic debris called meteoroids entering Earth's atmosphere at ext ...
.
Physical characteristics
Size
The majority of dust from comet activity is sub-micrometer to roughly micrometer in size. However, this fraction is short-lived, as
radiation pressure causes them to blow out of the Solar System
or
spiral inwards.
The next size class is large, "fluffy"
or "cluster-type"
aggregates of the above grains. These are typically 20-100 micrometers, a size not arbitrary but observed as the porous aggregates tend to fracture or compact.
Larger particles are
micrometeoroids
A micrometeoroid is a tiny meteoroid: a small particle of rock in space, usually weighing less than a gram. A micrometeorite is such a particle that survives passage through Earth's atmosphere and reaches Earth's surface.
The term "micrometeoro ...
,
not dust.
[ "...in practice the term is most often applied to objects smaller than approximately 100 um. These size ranges need to be modified." "By this definition, IDPs are particles smaller than 10um.""] In the absence of a definition from the
IAU, groups devised their own definitions of dust: smaller than 100 micrometers,
[ "tenth micron particles" "very fluffy aggregates"] 50, 40, 30,
[ S.3 Multifaceted Scientific Dust Observations "<~ 30 micrometer"] and 20 microns,
and <10 μm.
Some of these dust/micrometeorite definitions are approximate or ambiguous,
[ "10 um (Rubin and Grossman, 2010)""in the <100 um size fraction, i.e. across the transition between micrometeorites and IDPs"] some overlapping or self-conflicting.
[ "20 um for the upper cut-off" "50 um for the upper cut-off"]
The IAU released a formal statement in 2017. Meteoroids are 30 micrometers to 1 meter, dust is smaller, and the term "micrometeoroid" is discouraged (though not micrometeorite).
The
IMO noted the new definition, but still displays a prior definition on their site. The Meteoritical Society site retains its prior definition, 0.001 cm. The
AMS has posted no rigorous definition.
Composition
Dust is generally
chondritic in composition. Its monomers contain mafic silicates, such as
olivine
The mineral olivine () is a magnesium iron Silicate minerals, silicate with the chemical formula . It is a type of Nesosilicates, nesosilicate or orthosilicate. The primary component of the Earth's upper mantle (Earth), upper mantle, it is a com ...
and
pyroxene
The pyroxenes (commonly abbreviated Px) are a group of important rock-forming inosilicate minerals found in many igneous and metamorphic rocks. Pyroxenes have the general formula , where X represents ions of calcium (Ca), sodium (Na), iron ( ...
. Silicates are rich in high-condensation temperature
forsterite
Forsterite (Mg2SiO4; commonly abbreviated as Fo; also known as white olivine) is the magnesium-rich Endmember, end-member of the olivine solid solution series. It is Isomorphism (crystallography), isomorphous with the iron-rich end-member, fayalit ...
and
enstatite.
As these condense quickly, they tend to form very small particles, not merging droplets.
As with chondritic meteoroids, particles contain
Fe(Ni) sulfide
and GEMS (glass with embedded metal and sulfides)
Various amounts of organics (
CHON) are present. Though organics are cosmically abundant, and were widely predicted to exist in comets, they are spectrally indistinct in most telescopes. Organics were only confirmed via
mass spectrometry
Mass spectrometry (MS) is an analytical technique that is used to measure the mass-to-charge ratio of ions. The results are presented as a ''mass spectrum'', a plot of intensity as a function of the mass-to-charge ratio. Mass spectrometry is used ...
during
the Halley flybys.
Some organics are in the form of PAHs (
Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons).
Very small inclusions of
presolar grains (PSGs) may be found.
Dust and comet origin

The models for the origin of comets are:
# the interstellar model,
# the Solar System model,
# primordial rubble piles,
# aggregation of
planetesimal
Planetesimals () are solid objects thought to exist in protoplanetary disks and debris disks. Believed to have formed in the Solar System about 4.6 billion years ago, they aid study of its formation.
Formation
A widely accepted theory of pla ...
s in the dust disk around the
Uranus
Uranus is the seventh planet from the Sun. It is a gaseous cyan-coloured ice giant. Most of the planet is made of water, ammonia, and methane in a Supercritical fluid, supercritical phase of matter, which astronomy calls "ice" or Volatile ( ...
–
Neptune
Neptune is the eighth and farthest known planet from the Sun. It is the List of Solar System objects by size, fourth-largest planet in the Solar System by diameter, the third-most-massive planet, and the densest giant planet. It is 17 t ...
region,
# cold shells of material swept out by the
protostellar wind.
Bulk properties of the comet dust such as density as well as the chemical composition can distinguish between the models. For example, the
isotopic ratios of comet and of interstellar dust are very similar, indicating a common origin.
The 1) interstellar model says that
ices formed on dust grains in the dense cloud that preceded the
Sun. The mix of ice and dust then aggregated into a comet without appreciable chemical modification. J. Mayo Greenberg first proposed this idea in the 1970s.
In the 2) Solar System model, the ices that formed in the interstellar cloud first vaporized as part of the
accretion disk of gas and dust around the protosun. The vaporized ices later resolidified and assembled into comets. So the comets in this model would have a different composition than those comets that were made directly from interstellar ice.
The 3) primordial rubble pile model for comet formation says that comets agglomerate in the region where
Jupiter
Jupiter is the fifth planet from the Sun and the List of Solar System objects by size, largest in the Solar System. It is a gas giant with a Jupiter mass, mass more than 2.5 times that of all the other planets in the Solar System combined a ...
was forming.
Stardust's discovery of crystalline silicates in the dust of comet
Wild 2 implies that the dust formed above
glass temperature (> 1000 K) in the inner disk region around a hot young star, and was radially mixed in the solar nebula from the inner regions a larger distance from the star or the dust particle condensed in the outflow of evolved red giants or supergiants. The composition of the dust of comet Wild 2 is similar to the composition of dust found in the outer regions of the accretion disks around newly-forming stars.
A comet and its dust allow investigation of the Solar System beyond the main planetary orbits. Comets are distinguished by their orbits; long period comets have long elliptical orbits, randomly inclined to the plane of the Solar System, and with periods greater than 200 years.
Short period comets are usually inclined less than 30 degrees to the plane of the Solar System, revolve around the Sun in the same counterclockwise direction as the planets orbit, and have periods less than 200 years.
A comet will experience a range of diverse conditions as it traverses its orbit. For long period comets, most of the time it will be so far from the Sun that it will be too cold for evaporation of ices to occur. When it passes through the terrestrial planet region, evaporation will be rapid enough to blow away small grains, but the largest grains may resist entrainment and stay behind on the
comet nucleus, beginning the formation of a dust layer. Near the Sun, the heating and evaporation rate will be so great, that no dust can be retained. Therefore, the thickness of dust layers covering the nuclei of a comet can indicate how closely and how often a comet's perihelion travels are to the Sun. If a comet has an accumulation of thick dust layers, it may have frequent perihelion passages that don't approach the Sun too closely.
A thick accumulation of dust layers might be a good description of all of the short period comets, as dust layers with thicknesses on the order of meters are thought to have accumulated on the surfaces of short-period comet nuclei. The accumulation of dust layers over time would change the physical character of the short-period comet. A dust layer both inhibits the heating of the cometary ices by the Sun (the dust is impenetrable by sunlight and a poor conductor of heat), and slows the loss of gases from the nucleus below. A comet nucleus in an orbit typical of short period comets would quickly decrease its evaporation rate to the point that neither a coma or a tail would be detectable and might appear to astronomers as a low-albedo
near-Earth asteroid.
Further assemblages and bodies
Dust particles, aided by ices and organics, form "aggregates"
(less often, "agglomerates") of 30 to hundreds of micrometers. These are fluffy,
[ Tucson "fluffy aggregate"] due to the imperfect packing of cluster-type (large) dust particles, and their subsequent, imperfect packing into aggregates.
[ Discussion meeting issue “Cometary science after Rosetta” compiled and edited by Geraint H. Jones, Alan Fitzsimmons, Matthew M. Knight, and Matt G. G. T. Taylor "grains" "particles" "hierarchical aggregates" "'clusters'" "compact porous aggregates""highly porous aggregates"]
The next size category is pebbles, of millimeters to centimeters scale.
[ "cm-sized pebbles"] Pebbles were inferred at 103P/Hartley 2,
[ "dust, ice, and hundreds of discrete millimeter to decimeter sized particles."] and imaged directly at 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko.
Astrophysical use of the word "pebble"
differs from its
geological meaning. In turn, the next-larger geological term, "cobble," has been skipped by
Rosetta scientists.
Even larger bodies are "boulders" (decimeter-scale and above) or "chunks." These are rarely seen in the coma, as gas pressure is often insufficient to lift them to significant altitude or escape velocity.
[ " ejected chunks with diameter bigger than few meters""chunks up to the radius of 0.4 m"]
The building blocks of comets are the putative cometesimals, analogous to
planetesimal
Planetesimals () are solid objects thought to exist in protoplanetary disks and debris disks. Believed to have formed in the Solar System about 4.6 billion years ago, they aid study of its formation.
Formation
A widely accepted theory of pla ...
. Whether the actual cometesimals/planetesimals were pebble-scale, boulder-scale, or otherwise has been a key topic in Solar System and exoplanet research.
(Mis)Use of the term "dust"
At best, "dust" is a collective noun for the non-gas portion of the coma and tail(s). At worst, the term is an
English usage, understood well by astronomers in the field, but not to the general public, teachers, and scientists from other fields.
The larger solids are more properly called "debris"
or, for all non-gases, the general "particles"
or "grains."
Comet 2P/Encke
Encke is officially a dust-poor, gas-rich comet.
Encke actually emits most of its solid mass as meteoroids or "rocks,"
not dust. ISO measured no infrared evidence of a classical cometary dust tail due to small particles.
[} "abundant large particles near the comet pose a significant hazard to spacecraft. There is no evidence of a classical cometary dust tail due to small particles."]
References
{{Comets, nonobject=yes
Dust
Dust is made of particle size, fine particles of solid matter. On Earth, it generally consists of particles in the atmosphere that come from various sources such as soil lifted by wind (an aeolian processes, aeolian process), Types of volcan ...
Cosmic dust