Planetary scientists have suspected for months the presence of water on Pluto in the form of towering ice mountains.
But
it wasn't until recently that they had solid proof, and the discovery
is raising intriguing questions about the color and location of the
water ice.
The latest images of Pluto, released on Thursday, are the
first to reveal patches of frozen water on its surface. And adding to
the growing list of Pluto mysteries, neither the color nor location of
water ice on Pluto is what the scientists were expecting.
The most
recent photo, shown below, offers an especially intriguing view of both
the oldest and newest surfaces on Pluto: To the left of the close-up
shot is the most heavily cratered region on Pluto, which scientists
suspect is extremely old.
To the far right, however, you can see
the dividing outline of Pluto's iconic heart-shaped region, informally
named Tombaugh Regio — the water ice is identified in falsely colored
blue:
The false colors in the image above help scientists
differentiate between the water ice on Pluto and the other ices, such as
nitrogen, methane, and carbon-dioxide ice.
In reality, the water
ice on Pluto is red, not blue like in the photo or clear like it is here
on Earth. And scientists are dumbfounded as to why.
They don't yet
understand the relationship between water ice and the reddish tholin
colorants on Pluto's surface.The "tholin colorants" that Protopapa is
referring to are a type of molecule that are generally red in color and
form when organic compounds — which have nothing to do with life in this
case — are blasted with ultraviolet light from the sun. Pluto's
atmosphere is rich with tholins, but whether the red-tinted water ice on
Pluto's surface contains any of them remains an unanswered question.
Another mystery concerning water ice on Pluto is its location.
When
NASA's New Horizons spacecraft flew by Pluto on July 14, it focused on
this intriguing part of the dwarf planet that has since mystified
scientists as to how geologically diverse it is — with four mountain
ranges, a vast expanse of craters, and smooth plateaus, Pluto is one of
the most geologically diverse places in the solar system. Which is
amazing when you conside Pluto small size!!
When scientists first saw
the mountains on Pluto, their immediate conclusion was that the
mountains must be made of water ice because that's the only kind of ice
strong enough to support mountains over 10,000 feet tall.
Now,
they can give themselves a pat on the back because this latest image
reveals a large amount of water ice in one of the mountain.
There appears to be a vast expanse of ice in the mysterious
crack featured on the far left and in the heavily cratered patch, called
Viking Terra, to the north.
"Large expanses of Pluto don't show
exposed water ice, because it's apparently masked by other, more
volatile ices across most of the planet.
Since its closest approach
to Pluto, the New Horizons spacecraft has traveled an additional 500
million miles and is now 3.1 billion miles from Earth.
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