aads

Why Are Pluto And Charon So Different? (Synopsis) [Starts With A Bang]


“Just as a Chihuahua is still a dog, these ice dwarfs are still planetary bodies. The misfit becomes the average. The Pluto-like objects are more typical in our solar system than the nearby planets we first knew.” -Alan Stern

When New Horizons approached the Pluto system last year, it discovered two vastly different worlds in Pluto and Charon. While Pluto had mountains, plains, ridges, and surface regions with vastly different properties, Charon looked more like our Moon: cold, airless, mostly uniform and full of craters.

Image credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute, of Charon in slightly enhanced color.

Image credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute, of Charon in slightly enhanced color.

As soon as we learned these two world were so different, the question of “why” was brought to the forefront. Yet the very same images hold clues: beneath Pluto’s volatile, ever-changing surface may lie a world that’s not so different from Charon. It’s only the easily sublimated molecules like nitrogen and methane that make the difference, and the reason Pluto has them exclusively is that it likely stole them from Charon a long time ago.

Image credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute, of a backlit Pluto.

Image credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute, of a backlit Pluto.

Come get the whole, infuriating, thieving, bullying story on the best-studied world in the outer Solar System!



from ScienceBlogs http://ift.tt/1RfY9Eb

“Just as a Chihuahua is still a dog, these ice dwarfs are still planetary bodies. The misfit becomes the average. The Pluto-like objects are more typical in our solar system than the nearby planets we first knew.” -Alan Stern

When New Horizons approached the Pluto system last year, it discovered two vastly different worlds in Pluto and Charon. While Pluto had mountains, plains, ridges, and surface regions with vastly different properties, Charon looked more like our Moon: cold, airless, mostly uniform and full of craters.

Image credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute, of Charon in slightly enhanced color.

Image credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute, of Charon in slightly enhanced color.

As soon as we learned these two world were so different, the question of “why” was brought to the forefront. Yet the very same images hold clues: beneath Pluto’s volatile, ever-changing surface may lie a world that’s not so different from Charon. It’s only the easily sublimated molecules like nitrogen and methane that make the difference, and the reason Pluto has them exclusively is that it likely stole them from Charon a long time ago.

Image credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute, of a backlit Pluto.

Image credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute, of a backlit Pluto.

Come get the whole, infuriating, thieving, bullying story on the best-studied world in the outer Solar System!



from ScienceBlogs http://ift.tt/1RfY9Eb

Aucun commentaire:

Enregistrer un commentaire

adds 2