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  • The infant bow shock: a new...
    Gunell, Herbert; Goetz, Charlotte; Wedlund, Cyril Simon; Lindkvist, Jesper; Hamrin, Maria; Nilsson, Hans; Llera, Kristie; Eriksson, Anders; Holmström, Mats

    Astronomy and astrophysics (Berlin), 11/2018, Volume: 619
    Journal Article

    The bow shock is the first boundary the solar wind encounters as it approaches planets or comets. The Rosetta spacecraft was able to observe the formation of a bow shock by following comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko toward the Sun, through perihelion, and back outward again. The spacecraft crossed the newly formed bow shock several times during two periods a few months before and after perihelion; it observed an increase in magnetic field magnitude and oscillation amplitude, electron and proton heating at the shock, and the diminution of the solar wind further downstream. Rosetta observed a cometary bow shock in its infancy, a stage in its development not previously accessible to in situ measurements at comets and planets.