Solar Wind Interactions with the Coma of Comet 19P/Borrelly

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astronomy

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Scientific paper

On September 22, 2001, the Deep Space 1 spacecraft flew through the coma of Comet 19P/Borrelly, coming within 2154 km of the central nucleus at a relative velocity of 16.6 km/s. We report here on initial analysis of solar wind and cometary pickup ions measured by the Plasma Experiment for Planetary Exploration (PEPE) onboard DS1. PEPE is a novel energy-angle-mass/charge spectrometer that simultaneously measures ions and electrons over the energy range few eV to 32 keV/q and the M/q range 1 to 100 amu/e. Ion and electron data indicate a very strong interaction between the solar wind and cometary pickup ions leading to slowing of the solar wind from 320 km/s prior to the encounter to 10 km/s. A significant finding is that the ion flow field is not symmetric with respect to the nucleus-sun line, but rather is displaced a few thousand kilometers northward of it. It is possible that the strong jets observed in the DS1 images of the nucleus are related to the observed ion flow asymmetry.

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