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SactoGuy18

macrumors 601
Sep 11, 2006
4,349
1,509
Sacramento, CA USA
Given the surface temperature on Pluto, it surprises no one that the planet is heavily covered in ice made of frozen nitrogen, carbon monoxide or methane. Indeed, when space probes or human exploration lands on the moons orbiting Uranus or Neptune, they'll have be careful because it will be landing on essentially frozen versions of what is gaseous in our Earth's atmosphere.
 

aaronvan

Suspended
Dec 21, 2011
1,350
9,353
República Cascadia
Pluto and Charon, with Earth for scale.

8b53965948a9d6da8853e11709f0e09b.jpg
 

Scepticalscribe

macrumors Ivy Bridge
Jul 29, 2008
63,987
46,452
In a coffee shop.
Next Monday, it seems that the BBC are set to broadcast a documentary about this. As I watch so little TV, it is very rare for me to plan to watch something in advance, but this is one programme I shall be glued to.
 

MacNut

macrumors Core
Jan 4, 2002
22,995
9,973
CT
No craters found on Pluto, means it's less than 100 million years old.

http://www.nasa.gov/image-feature/the-icy-mountains-of-pluto
New close-up images of a region near Pluto’s equator reveal a giant surprise: a range of youthful mountains rising as high as 11,000 feet (3,500 meters) above the surface of the icy body.

The mountains likely formed no more than 100 million years ago -- mere youngsters relative to the 4.56-billion-year age of the solar system -- and may still be in the process of building, says Jeff Moore of New Horizons’ Geology, Geophysics and Imaging Team (GGI). That suggests the close-up region, which covers less than one percent of Pluto’s surface, may still be geologically active today.

Moore and his colleagues base the youthful age estimate on the lack of craters in this scene. Like the rest of Pluto, this region would presumably have been pummeled by space debris for billions of years and would have once been heavily cratered -- unless recent activity had given the region a facelift, erasing those pockmarks.

“This is one of the youngest surfaces we’ve ever seen in the solar system,” says Moore.
 
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Sydde

macrumors 68030
Aug 17, 2009
2,552
7,050
IOKWARDI
Charon has a dark polar region which has been nicknamed "Mordor" – excellent image at this link, it really does look like Sauron's realm. Explanation I heard: Pluto is peeling off barrels of nitrogen, Charon is scooping a bunch of it up, then burning it off itself, except for the pole, which has been in constant darkness. Presumably, by the end of the century, when the system is closer to aphelion, the off-gassing will abate a lot.
 

obeygiant

macrumors 601
Original poster
Jan 14, 2002
4,181
4,097
totally cool
nh-pluto-surface-scale.jpg


New close-up images of a region near Pluto’s equator reveal a giant surprise: a range of youthful mountains rising as high as 11,000 feet (3,500 meters) above the surface of the icy body.

The mountains likely formed no more than 100 million years ago -- mere youngsters relative to the 4.56-billion-year age of the solar system -- and may still be in the process of building, says Jeff Moore of New Horizons’ Geology, Geophysics and Imaging Team (GGI). That suggests the close-up region, which covers less than one percent of Pluto’s surface, may still be geologically active today.

Moore and his colleagues base the youthful age estimate on the lack of craters in this scene. Like the rest of Pluto, this region would presumably have been pummeled by space debris for billions of years and would have once been heavily cratered -- unless recent activity had given the region a facelift, erasing those pockmarks.

“This is one of the youngest surfaces we’ve ever seen in the solar system,” says Moore.

Unlike the icy moons of giant planets, Pluto cannot be heated by gravitational interactions with a much larger planetary body. Some other process must be generating the mountainous landscape.

“This may cause us to rethink what powers geological activity on many other icy worlds,” says GGI deputy team leader John Spencer of the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colo.

The mountains are probably composed of Pluto’s water-ice “bedrock.”
Although methane and nitrogen ice covers much of the surface of Pluto, these materials are not strong enough to build the mountains. Instead, a stiffer material, most likely water-ice, created the peaks. “At Pluto’s temperatures, water-ice behaves more like rock,” said deputy GGI lead Bill McKinnon of Washington University, St. Louis.
 

Sydde

macrumors 68030
Aug 17, 2009
2,552
7,050
IOKWARDI
NYTimes article:

Because Pluto is the Roman god of the underworld, the scientists drew on underworld entities from myths and literature in beginning to assign informal names to the regions.

A large splotch that resembles a whale was named Cthulhu, a deity from a H. P. Lovecraft story. Other splotch names included Meng-Po, the goddess of forgetfulness in Chinese mythology; Balrog, a creature in J. R. R. Tolkien’s “Lord of the Rings” books; and Vucub Came and Hun Came, death gods of Mayan mythology.

“We got tired of calling it the dark spot on the left and the dark spot on the right,” said Jeffrey M. Moore, the leader of the geology, geophysics and imaging team.

and, of course, scientists with funny hats

altPLUTO-articleLarge.jpg
 

Scepticalscribe

macrumors Ivy Bridge
Jul 29, 2008
63,987
46,452
In a coffee shop.
You know, it is at times such as this, that I fantasise about Star Trek 'to explore strange new worlds' - as a child, that is one of the main things that I wanted to do, and it came as a huge disappointment to realise that manned space flight to the planets (and beyond) would be decades - if not centuries - away.

And ps: To my mind, Pluto is still classed as a planet. For that matter, I don't care how many micro-planets turn up in the Kuiper Belt or elsewhere that dwarf Pluto, to me, it will always be a planet, albeit a somewhat quirky one.
 
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