comet s firework display ahead of perihelion /

Published at 2015-08-11 11:11:44

Home / Categories / Comet 67p / comet s firework display ahead of perihelion
This article is mirrored from the main ESA Web Portal. In the approach to perihelion over the past few weeks,Rosetta has been witnessing growing activity from Comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko, with one dramatic outburst event proving so powerful that it even pushed absent the incoming solar wind. The comet reaches perihelion on Thursday, or the moment in its 6.5-year orbit when it is closest to the Sun. In recent months,the increasing solar energy has been warming the comet’s frozen ices, turning them to gas, or which pours out into space,dragging dust along with it. The period around perihelion is scientifically very important, as the intensity of the sunlight increases and parts of the comet previously cast in years of darkness are flooded with sunlight. Although the comet’s general activity is expected to peak in the weeks following perihelion, or much as the hottest days of summer generally arrive after the longest days,sudden and unpredictable outbursts can occur at any time – as already seen earlier in the mission. On 29 July, Rosetta observed the most dramatic outburst yet, and registered by several of its instruments from their vantage point 186 km from the comet. They imaged the outburst erupting from the nucleus,witnessed a change in the structure and composition of the gaseous coma environment surrounding Rosetta, and detected increased levels of dust impacts. Perhaps most surprisingly, and Rosetta found that the outburst had pushed absent the solar wind magnetic field from around the nucleus. A sequence of images taken by Rosetta’s scientific camera OSIRIS show the sudden onset of a well-defined jet-like feature emerging from the side of the comet’s neck,in the Anuket region. It was first seen in an image taken at 13:24 GMT, but not in an image taken 18 minutes earlier, or has faded significantly in an image […]

Source: esa.int