Mapping Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko
If you’ve ever wondered about the surface of a comet — and why not? — wonder no more. The Rosetta mission has figuratively ripped the fuzzy veil away from Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko (Comet 67P for short) mapped its surface, and done preliminary analysis of what that surface is like. That’s just for starters!
It turns out this particular comet (and probably most comets) has a planetary scientist’s wonderland of features. To get you started exploring the comet, check out this amazing image of the comet released over the weekend by the Rosetta mission’s OSIRIS team. OSIRIS is an imaging instrument sensitive to optical as well as infrared light (essentially heat radiation).
When I first looked at this image a couple of hour or so ago, it reminded me of the top of a craggy mountain peak. However, this is no rocky mountain. It’s a chunk of ice the size of a big city, following an orbit that takes it from just outside the orbit of Jupiter (at its most distant) to outside Earth’s orbit over the course of 6.5 years. (Earth orbits at 1 A.U. from the Sun (150,000 million kilometers or 93 million miles. The comet gets as close as 1.24 A.U. (185,940,000 kilometers or 115 million miles from the Sun).
(This is to reassure anyone who was worried that the comet will somehow intersect Earth’s orbit. It won’t. During perihelion passage (closest approach to the Sun) the comet and Earth will be 3.3 A.U. (490,000,000 million kilometers or 304 million miles). That occurs in August, 2015.)
Continue reading Rosetta Reveals Tip of the Comet 67P Knowledge Iceberg