The Rosetta spacecraft is now less than 2,000 kilometers from the
comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko (which I’ll just call ChuGer, for
obvious reasons). In less than a week the European probe will enter
orbit around the 4-kilometer-wide chunk of ice and rock, but even from
this distance it’s starting to return pretty great images of it. On July
29, 2014, it took this shot with its main OSIRIS camera:
Photo by ESA/Rosetta/MPS for OSIRIS Team MPS/UPD/LAM/IAA/SSO/INTA/UPM/DASP/IDA
The comet’s solid nucleus is definitely a freaky place. Not only does it have those two big chunks,
there appears to be a brighter collar or ring of material in the neck
region. It’s too early to know what’s going on there, though it may
provide a clue as to why the comet has that overall shape. It may have
resulted from two different-sized comets sticking together after a low
speed impact, or it could be it was a single comet and has eroded away
to leave that shape (a lot of the solid material in a comet is what we would think of as frozen gases—carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, ammonia, and so on—and as it approaches the Sun they sublimate away).
My own best guess is that it was a single comet that got hit by a
smaller rock and shattered from the impact. The pieces spread out, but
not very far, and their combined gravity, feeble as it was, pulled it
all back together in a jumble with those two big pieces dominating.
The bright collar is puzzling. It’s not like a snowball a few
kilometers across has a lot of gravity—a good, solid jump would launch
you into space if you were standing on it—but there’s some. The
neck region would have the weakest gravity, so pebbles, rocks, dust,
and so on would tend to flow downhill, to the two lobes. That might
leave the brighter ice behind to create that ring. I’m completely
speculating here, but hopefully we’ll know more soon.
At around the same time that higher-resolution photo was taken,
Rosetta also took one with its lower resolution NavCam, and got this:
Photo by ESA/Rosetta/NAVCAM
Interesting! While fuzzier, you can see a handful of craters,
including the two big ones, one on each lobe. This is definitely a
promise of things to come.
Rosetta will enter orbit around ChuGer in early August, and the
imagine quality will continue to improve. Exciting times are ahead! My
friend Emily Lakdawalla at The Planetary Society has lots of details on what’s going on and what will happen then, too.
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