A Dust Jet from the Surface of Comet 67P
			
		
		
		
			Where do comet tails come from? 
There are no obvious places on the 
nuclei of comets from which the 
jets that create 
comet tails emanate. 
Last year, though, ESA's 
Rosetta spacecraft not only imaged a 
jet emerging from 
Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, but flew right through it. 
Featured is a telling picture showing a 
bright plume emerging from a small circular dip bounded on one side by a 10-meter high wall. 
Analyses of Rosetta data shows that the jet was composed of both dust and water-ice.
The mundane terrain indicates that 
something likely happened far under the porous surface to create the plume. 
This image was taken last July, about two months before 
Rosetta's mission ended with a controlled impact onto Comet 67P's surface.