The activity of the Jupiter co-orbital comet P/2019 LD2 (ATLAS) observed with the 10.4m GTC

Javier Licandro, Julia de Leon, Fernando Moreno, Carlos de la Fuente Marcos, Raul de la Fuente Marcos, Antonio Cabrera Lavers, Luisa Lara, Noemi Pinilla-Alonso, Mario de Pra, Ana Carolina de Souza-Feliciano, and Stefan Geier Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias, Research, La Laguna, Tenerife, Spain (jlicandr@iac.es) Instituto de Astrofisica de Andalucia, CSIC, Glorieta de la Astronomia s/n, 18008 Granada, Spain Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Ciudad Universitaria, E-28040 Madrid, Spain GRANTECAN, Cuesta de San Jose s/n, E-38712 Breña Baja, La Palma, Spain Florida Space Institute, 12354 Research Parkway Partnership 1 Building, Suite 214 Orlando, FL 32826-0650, USA

Introduction: Comet P/2019 LD2 (ATLAS) was discovered early June 2019 as a faint asteroidal object and initially classified as a Jupiter Trojan. In depth inspection of images obtained during 2019 revealed that the object is active. No signs of cometary-like activity have been detected on any Jupiter Trojans until now, despite it is widely accepted that they are captured objects from the outer solar system. For that reason, we scheduled P/2019 LD2 observations with the world's largest optical telescope, the 10.4m Gran Telecopio CANARIAS (GTC) to study its nature as soon as it became visible in May 2020 In the meantime, Kareta et al. (2020) showed that the comet had experienced a close encounter with Jupiter on February 17, 2017 at 0.092 AU, well inside the Hill radius of the planet, 0.338 AU. They conclude that it is a recently captured Centaur, not a Jupiter Trojan.
Even if P/2019 LD2 is not the first active Jupiter Trojan, it is a very interesting object that could help to better understand the transition from Centaur to JFC. Its orbit just beyond Jupiter and its activity are evocative of 29P/Schwassmann-Wachmann, an object considered as a prototypical "gateway" between the Centaurs and JFCs by Sarid et al. (2019).

Observations:
We present the observations of P/2019 LD2 (ATLAS) obtained on 2020 May 16 and 17 using the OSIRIS camera-spectrograph of the 10.4 m GTC.
On May 16 we obtained images , using the Sloan g',r',i',z' filters that were used to characterize its overall level of cometary activity using a Monte Carlo dust tail fitting code as described in various papers (see, e.g. Moreno et al. 2016Moreno et al. , 2017, and references therein). The comet presents a conspicuous coma and tail as seen Fig. 1.
We also obtained two visible spectra of P/2019 LD2 on May 17 with the aim of looking for signatures of the typical gas species observed in comets. Each individual spectra consisted of an exposure of 600 seconds using the R300B grism and the 1.49′′ slit width, covering a wavelength range from Past, present and future dynamical evolution: The assessment of the dynamical evolution of P/2019 LD2 requires the analysis of an extensive sample of N-body simulations. In this work, we have used the approach discussed in de la Fuente Marcos & de la Fuente Marcos (2019) and Licandro et al. (2019) to study the past, present and future evolution.

Results:
Our results can be summarized as follows: (i) P/2019 LD2 shows a conspicuous coma and tail with a longitude > 1′.
(ii) There is no evidence of CN, C2 or C3 emission within the 3-σ level in the comet spectrum. In particular there are no signs of the CN (0-0) emission at 3880 Åthat it is usually the strongest emission observed in comets.
(iii) According to our model, the dust emission of P/2019 LD2 can be described by a Gaussian with a FWHM=180 days, a maximum (dM/dt)0 = 50 kg s −1 attained on 2019 November 27 (t =170 days from the observations) that then decreases again, with a current (2020 May 16) dust loss rate of 5 kg s −1 . This implies a total dust mass loss of 9×10 8 kg since the start of the dust emission, and almost no dust emission when observed in 2018.
(v) The origin of activity is most likely linked to a thermally driven process, likely associated to sublimation of crystalline water ice and clathrates (vi) The nucleus corresponds to a km-size object (with radius between 1.5 and 3.5 km), in the sizerange of the JFCs.
(vii) P/2019 LD2 is now an ephemeral co-orbital of Jupiter, following what looks like a short arc of a quasi-satellite cycle that started in 2017 and will end in 2028. It will experience a very close encounter with Jupiter at ∼10 Jovian radii on January 18, 2063. If it survive the close approach, its probability of escaping the solar system during the next 0.5 Myr is 0.48±0.02 (ix) The origin of P/2019 LD2 is still an open question. The probability of this comet having been captured from interstellar space during the last 0.5 Myr is 0.50±0.03, 0.79±0.06 during the last 2 Myr and to 0.89±0.07 for 4 Myr, suggesting that P/2019 LD2 can be a captured interstellar comet. Anyhow, a very close encounter with one of the giant planets of a former member of the scattered disk may have produced a fragmentation event induced by the planetary tidal force that was eventually able to form the observed, present-day, P/2019 LD2 .