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       "Deep Impact: Excaving Comet Tempel 1" S.I. Ipatov (University of Maryland, USA) Abstract: On 4 July 2005 Deep
      Impact collided with comet Tempel 1, excaving a crater. Deep Impact
      consisted of two fully functional spacecraft: an impacting spacecraft
      weighting 364 kg and a flyby spacecraft for observing the impact and
      relaying data from the impactor. There were three optical instruments on
      both spacecraft: a high-resolution instrument (HRI) and a
      medium-resolution instrument (MRI) on the flyby spacecraft, and an
      impactor targeting sensor (ITS) mounted on the impactor. HRI has the
      infrared (1.05 to 4.8 micron) spectrometer. The impact was also observed
      by over 80 ground-based observatories and by several spacecraft (Rosetta,
      Hubble Space Telescope, Chandra, Spitzer). Impact speed was 10.3 km/s. The
      impact was oblique, 20 to 35 degrees from horizontal. Initial ejecta were
      hot (>1000 kelvins). The fastest material was moving at ~5 km/s,
      projected in the plane of the sky as seen from the spacecraft. The true
      velocity is likely to have been 7 to 10 km/s. A large increase in organic
      material occurred during and after the impact, with smaller changes in
      carbon dioxide relative to water. Hydrogen cyanide (HCN) was identified in
      the plume. The mean radius of the nucleus is estimated to have been 3.0±0.1
      km, the longest dimension is 7.6 km and the shortest is 4.9 km. Albedo
      variations are within 50% of an average of 0.04. The bulk density of the
      nucleus is estimated at roughly 0.6 g cm-3. The derived
      temperature varies from 260±6 K to 329±8 K on the sunlit side.
      Observations of the comet before impact detected numerous brief outbursts
      from the comet. Many of the outbursts were associated with an area near
      local sunrise. Based on the images obtained during the flight, we studied
      cosmic rays. 
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