Artist’s impression of the infant bow shock detected by ESA’s Rosetta spacecraft at Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko.
The spacecraft detected signs of a formingbow shock around 50 times closer to the comet’s nucleus than anticipated in the case of 67P. This boundary was observed to be asymmetric, wider than the fully developed bow shocks observed at other comets, and moving in unexpected ways.
Rosetta detected the bow shock as the boundary changed position responding to the upstream magnetic field flipping from one side to the other. As a result, the spacecraft found itself alternatively outside of the shock (left frame) and behind it (right frame).
It is the first time a bow shock in such an early formation stage has been detected anywhere in the Solar System.