Rosetta’s comet is coming to life. New images taken with one of the cameras aboard the spacecraft show strong jets shooting from the neck of the comet and other fainter ones bursting from nearly the entire length of the duck-shaped space rock.
Another instrument aboard the spacecraft has caught a whiff of some pretty pungent compounds, in the comet’s vapor, including hydrogen sulfide, which smells like rotten eggs; ammonia, which gives horse barns their signature scent; and hydrogen cyanide, which resembles the aroma of almonds. The instrument also found traces of formaldehyde, sulfur dioxide and carbon disulfide in the comet’s hazy coma.
These compounds hold many of the elements essential for life and could give clues to how the solar system formed, mission scientists say.