As the Sun skims through the galaxy, it emits charged particles in a stream of plasma called the solar wind.
The solar wind, in turn, creates a bubble called the heliosphere that extends far beyond the planets of the solar system.
For decades, scientists have visualised the heliosphere as shaped like a comet, with a very long tail extending some 464 billion miles, which is thousands of times as far as the distance from Earth to the Sun.
These curve around in two - relatively short - tails towards the back. The end result is a heliosphere without that long tail; a heliosphere that looks a lot more like a crescent moon than a comet.
The two jets are similar to other astrophysical jets seen in space, so studying them locally could open doors to understanding such jets throughout the universe.
"Scientists thought the solar wind flowing down the tail could easily pull the magnetic fields in the heliosphere along as it flowed by, creating this long tail. But it turns out the magnetic fields are strong enough to resist that pull - so instead they squeeze the solar wind and create these two jets," said Opher.
Opher and her colleagues found the jets and determined the new shape when they adjusted simulations of the heliosphere based on observations collected from NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft, which recently moved outside of the heliosphere into interstellar space.
Instead of being dominated solely by the flow of the interstellar material to create a long tail, the shape of the heliosphere is also affected by the solar wind jets emanating from the Sun, space scientist Jim Drake at the University of Maryland in College Park, said.
"If there were no interstellar flow, then the magnetic fields around the Sun would shape the solar wind into two jets pointing straight north and south," said Drake.
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