Bow shock

/boʊ ʃɑk/ noun

A curved shock wave that forms when the solar wind encounters an obstacle like a planet's magnetosphere or when a star moves through the interstellar medium. It resembles the wake created by a boat moving through water.

Named by analogy to the bow wave created by a ship moving through water. The astronomical usage developed in the 1960s when spacecraft first detected these shock formations around planets and later when astronomers observed them around fast-moving stars.

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