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Science | 2016

Surface compositions across Pluto and Charon.

William M. Grundy; Richard P. Binzel; Bonnie J. Buratti; Jason C. Cook; Dale P. Cruikshank; C.M. Dalle Ore; A.M. Earle; Kimberly Ennico; Carly Howett; Allen W. Lunsford; Catherine B. Olkin; Alex H. Parker; S. Philippe; Silvia Protopapa; Eric Quirico; D. C. Reuter; Bernard Schmitt; Kelsi N. Singer; Anne Jacqueline Verbiscer; Ross A. Beyer; Marc William Buie; Andrew F. Cheng; D. E. Jennings; Ivan R. Linscott; J. Wm. Parker; Paul M. Schenk; John R. Spencer; John Arthur Stansberry; S. A. Stern; Henry Blair Throop

New Horizons unveils the Pluto system In July 2015, the New Horizons spacecraft flew through the Pluto system at high speed, humanitys first close look at this enigmatic system on the outskirts of our solar system. In a series of papers, the New Horizons team present their analysis of the encounter data downloaded so far: Moore et al. present the complex surface features and geology of Pluto and its large moon Charon, including evidence of tectonics, glacial flow, and possible cryovolcanoes. Grundy et al. analyzed the colors and chemical compositions of their surfaces, with ices of H2O, CH4, CO, N2, and NH3 and a reddish material which may be tholins. Gladstone et al. investigated the atmosphere of Pluto, which is colder and more compact than expected and hosts numerous extensive layers of haze. Weaver et al. examined the small moons Styx, Nix, Kerberos, and Hydra, which are irregularly shaped, fast-rotating, and have bright surfaces. Bagenal et al. report how Pluto modifies its space environment, including interactions with the solar wind and a lack of dust in the system. Together, these findings massively increase our understanding of the bodies in the outer solar system. They will underpin the analysis of New Horizons data, which will continue for years to come. Science, this issue pp. 1284, 10.1126/science.aad9189, 10.1126/science.aad8866, 10.1126/science.aae0030, & 10.1126/science.aad9045 Pluto and Charon have surfaces dominated by volatile ices, with large variations in color and albedo. INTRODUCTION The Kuiper Belt hosts a swarm of distant, icy objects ranging in size from small, primordial planetesimals to much larger, highly evolved objects, representing a whole new class of previously unexplored cryogenic worlds. Pluto, the largest among them, along with its system of five satellites, has been revealed by NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft flight through the system in July 2015, nearly a decade after its launch. RATIONALE Landforms expressed on the surface of a world are the product of the available materials and of the action of the suite of processes that are enabled by the local physical and chemical conditions. They provide observable clues about what processes have been at work over the course of time, the understanding of which is a prerequisite to reconstructing the world’s history. Materials known to exist at Pluto’s surface from ground-based spectroscopic observations include highly volatile cryogenic ices of N2 and CO, along with somewhat less volatile CH4 ice, as well as H2O and C2H6 ices and more complex tholins that are inert at Pluto surface temperatures. Ices of H2O and NH3 are inert components known to exist on Pluto’s large satellite Charon. New Horizons’ Ralph instrument was designed to map colors and compositions in the Pluto system. It consists of a charge-coupled device camera with four color filters spanning wavelengths from 400 to 970 nm plus a near-infrared imaging spectrometer covering wavelengths from 1.25 to 2.5 μm, where the various cryogenic ices are distinguishable via their characteristic vibrational absorption features. RESULTS New Horizons made its closest approach to the system on 14 July 2015. Observations of Pluto and Charon obtained that day reveal regionally diverse colors and compositions. On Pluto, the color images show nonvolatile tholins coating an ancient, heavily cratered equatorial belt. A smooth, thousand-kilometer plain must be able to refresh its surface rapidly enough to erase all impact craters. Infrared observations of this region show volatile ices including N2 and CO. H2O ice is not detected there, but it does appear in neighboring regions. CH4 ice appears on crater rims and mountain ridges at low latitudes and is abundant at Pluto’s high northern latitudes. Pluto’s regional albedo contrasts are among the most extreme for solar system objects. Pluto’s large moon Charon offers its own surprises. Its H2O ice–rich surface is unlike other outer solar system icy satellites in exhibiting distinctly reddish tholin coloration around its northern pole as well as a few highly localized patches rich in NH3 ice. CONCLUSION Pluto exhibits evidence for a variety of processes that act to modify its surface over time scales ranging from seasonal to geological. Much of this activity is enabled by the existence of volatile ices such as N2 and CO that are easily mobilized even at the extremely low temperatures prevalent on Pluto’s surface, around 40 K. These ices sublimate and condense on seasonal time scales and flow glacially. As they move about Pluto’s surface environment, they interact with materials such as H2O ice that are sufficiently rigid to support rugged topography. Although Pluto’s durable H2O ice is probably not active on its own, it appears to be sculpted in a variety of ways through the action of volatile ices of N2 and CO. CH4 ice plays a distinct role of its own, enabled by its intermediate volatility. CH4 ice condenses at high altitudes and on the winter hemisphere, contributing to the construction of some of Pluto’s more unusual and distinctive landforms. The latitudinal distribution of Charon’s polar reddening suggests a thermally controlled production process, and the existence of highly localized patches rich in NH3 ice on its surface implies relatively recent emplacement. Enhanced color view of Pluto’s surface diversity This mosaic was created by merging Multispectral Visible Imaging Camera color imagery (650 m per pixel) with Long Range Reconnaissance Imager panchromatic imagery (230 m per pixel). At lower right, ancient, heavily cratered terrain is coated with dark, reddish tholins. At upper right, volatile ices filling the informally named Sputnik Planum have modified the surface, creating a chaos-like array of blocky mountains. Volatile ice occupies a few nearby deep craters, and in some areas the volatile ice is pocked with arrays of small sublimation pits. At left, and across the bottom of the scene, gray-white CH4 ice deposits modify tectonic ridges, the rims of craters, and north-facing slopes. The New Horizons spacecraft mapped colors and infrared spectra across the encounter hemispheres of Pluto and Charon. The volatile methane, carbon monoxide, and nitrogen ices that dominate Pluto’s surface have complicated spatial distributions resulting from sublimation, condensation, and glacial flow acting over seasonal and geological time scales. Pluto’s water ice “bedrock” was also mapped, with isolated outcrops occurring in a variety of settings. Pluto’s surface exhibits complex regional color diversity associated with its distinct provinces. Charon’s color pattern is simpler, dominated by neutral low latitudes and a reddish northern polar region. Charon’s near-infrared spectra reveal highly localized areas with strong ammonia absorption tied to small craters with relatively fresh-appearing impact ejecta.


Icarus | 2017

Pluto’s global surface composition through pixel-by-pixel Hapke modeling of New Horizons Ralph/LEISA data

Silvia Protopapa; William M. Grundy; D. C. Reuter; Douglas P. Hamilton; C.M. Dalle Ore; Jason C. Cook; Dale P. Cruikshank; B. Schmitt; S. Philippe; Eric Quirico; Richard P. Binzel; A.M. Earle; Kimberly Ennico; Carly Howett; Allen W. Lunsford; Catherine B. Olkin; Alex H. Parker; Kelsi N. Singer; Alan Stern; Anne Jacqueline Verbiscer; H.A. Weaver; Leslie A. Young

Abstract On July 14th 2015, NASA’s New Horizons mission gave us an unprecedented detailed view of the Pluto system. The complex compositional diversity of Pluto’s encounter hemisphere was revealed by the Ralph/LEISA infrared spectrometer on board of New Horizons. We present compositional maps of Pluto defining the spatial distribution of the abundance and textural properties of the volatiles methane and nitrogen ices and non-volatiles water ice and tholin. These results are obtained by applying a pixel-by-pixel Hapke radiative transfer model to the LEISA scans. Our analysis focuses mainly on the large scale latitudinal variations of methane and nitrogen ices and aims at setting observational constraints to volatile transport models. Specifically, we find three latitudinal bands: the first, enriched in methane, extends from the pole to 55°N, the second dominated by nitrogen, continues south to 35°N, and the third, composed again mainly of methane, reaches 20°N. We demonstrate that the distribution of volatiles across these surface units can be explained by differences in insolation over the past few decades. The latitudinal pattern is broken by Sputnik Planitia, a large reservoir of volatiles, with nitrogen playing the most important role. The physical properties of methane and nitrogen in this region are suggestive of the presence of a cold trap or possible volatile stratification. Furthermore our modeling results point to a possible sublimation transport of nitrogen from the northwest edge of Sputnik Planitia toward the south.


Nature | 2016

The formation of Charon’s red poles from seasonally cold-trapped volatiles

William M. Grundy; Dale P. Cruikshank; G. R. Gladstone; Carly Howett; Tod R. Lauer; John R. Spencer; Michael E. Summers; Marc William Buie; A.M. Earle; Kimberly Ennico; J. Wm. Parker; Simon B. Porter; Kelsi N. Singer; S. A. Stern; Anne Jacqueline Verbiscer; Ross A. Beyer; Richard P. Binzel; Bonnie J. Buratti; Jason C. Cook; C.M. Dalle Ore; Cathy Olkin; Alex H. Parker; S. Protopapa; Eric Quirico; Kurt D. Retherford; Stuart J. Robbins; B. Schmitt; J. A. Stansberry; Orkan M. Umurhan; H.A. Weaver

A unique feature of Pluto’s large satellite Charon is its dark red northern polar cap. Similar colours on Pluto’s surface have been attributed to tholin-like organic macromolecules produced by energetic radiation processing of hydrocarbons. The polar location on Charon implicates the temperature extremes that result from Charon’s high obliquity and long seasons in the production of this material. The escape of Pluto’s atmosphere provides a potential feedstock for a complex chemistry. Gas from Pluto that is transiently cold-trapped and processed at Charon’s winter pole was proposed as an explanation for the dark coloration on the basis of an image of Charon’s northern hemisphere, but not modelled quantitatively. Here we report images of the southern hemisphere illuminated by Pluto-shine and also images taken during the approach phase that show the northern polar cap over a range of longitudes. We model the surface thermal environment on Charon and the supply and temporary cold-trapping of material escaping from Pluto, as well as the photolytic processing of this material into more complex and less volatile molecules while cold-trapped. The model results are consistent with the proposed mechanism for producing the observed colour pattern on Charon.


Science | 2018

Dunes on Pluto

Matt W. Telfer; Eric J. R. Parteli; Jani Radebaugh; Ross A. Beyer; Tanguy Bertrand; F. Forget; Francis Nimmo; William M. Grundy; Jeffrey M. Moore; S. Alan Stern; John R. Spencer; Tod R. Lauer; A.M. Earle; Richard P. Binzel; H.A. Weaver; Cathy Olkin; Leslie A. Young; Kimberly Ennico; Kirby Runyon

Methane ice dunes on Pluto Wind-blown sand or ice dunes are known on Earth, Mars, Venus, Titan, and comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. Telfer et al. used images taken by the New Horizons spacecraft to identify dunes in the Sputnik Planitia region on Pluto (see the Perspective by Hayes). Modeling shows that these dunes could be formed by sand-sized grains of solid methane ice transported in typical Pluto winds. The methane grains could have been lofted into the atmosphere by the melting of surrounding nitrogen ice or blown down from nearby mountains. Understanding how dunes form under Pluto conditions will help with interpreting similar features found elsewhere in the solar system. Science, this issue p. 992; see also p. 960 Images from New Horizons show dunes on Pluto, probably formed from sand-sized grains of solid methane. The surface of Pluto is more geologically diverse and dynamic than had been expected, but the role of its tenuous atmosphere in shaping the landscape remains unclear. We describe observations from the New Horizons spacecraft of regularly spaced, linear ridges whose morphology, distribution, and orientation are consistent with being transverse dunes. These are located close to mountainous regions and are orthogonal to nearby wind streaks. We demonstrate that the wavelength of the dunes (~0.4 to 1 kilometer) is best explained by the deposition of sand-sized (~200 to ~300 micrometer) particles of methane ice in moderate winds (<10 meters per second). The undisturbed morphology of the dunes, and relationships with the underlying convective glacial ice, imply that the dunes have formed in the very recent geological past.


Icarus | 2017

Inflight radiometric calibration of New Horizons’ Multispectral Visible Imaging Camera (MVIC)

Carly Howett; Alex H. Parker; Catherine B. Olkin; D. C. Reuter; Kimberly Ennico; William M. Grundy; A.L. Graps; K.P. Harrison; Henry Blair Throop; Marc William Buie; J.R. Lovering; Simon B. Porter; H.A. Weaver; Leslie A. Young; S. A. Stern; Ross A. Beyer; Richard P. Binzel; Bonnie J. Buratti; Andrew F. Cheng; Jason C. Cook; Dale P. Cruikshank; C.M. Dalle Ore; A.M. Earle; D. E. Jennings; Ivan R. Linscott; Allen W. Lunsford; Joel Wm. Parker; S. Phillippe; Silvia Protopapa; Eric Quirico

Abstract We discuss two semi-independent calibration techniques used to determine the inflight radiometric calibration for the New Horizons’ Multi-spectral Visible Imaging Camera (MVIC). The first calibration technique compares the measured number of counts (DN) observed from a number of well calibrated stars to those predicted using the component-level calibration. The ratio of these values provides a multiplicative factor that allows a conversation between the preflight calibration to the more accurate inflight one, for each detector. The second calibration technique is a channel-wise relative radiometric calibration for MVICs blue, near-infrared and methane color channels using Hubble and New Horizons observations of Charon and scaling from the red channel stellar calibration. Both calibration techniques produce very similar results (better than 7% agreement), providing strong validation for the techniques used. Since the stellar calibration described here can be performed without a color target in the field of view and covers all of MVICs detectors, this calibration was used to provide the radiometric keyword values delivered by the New Horizons project to the Planetary Data System (PDS). These keyword values allow each observation to be converted from counts to physical units; a description of how these keyword values were generated is included. Finally, mitigation techniques adopted for the gain drift observed in the near-infrared detector and one of the panchromatic framing cameras are also discussed.


Icarus | 2018

Pluto's haze as a surface material

William M. Grundy; T. Bertrand; Richard P. Binzel; Marc William Buie; Bonnie J. Buratti; Andrew F. Cheng; Jason C. Cook; Dale P. Cruikshank; S.L. Devins; C.M. Dalle Ore; A.M. Earle; K. Ennico; F. Forget; Peter Gao; G. R. Gladstone; Carly Howett; D. E. Jennings; Joshua A. Kammer; Tod R. Lauer; Ivan R. Linscott; Carey Michael Lisse; Allen W. Lunsford; William B. McKinnon; Catherine B. Olkin; Alex H. Parker; S. Protopapa; E. Quirico; D. C. Reuter; B. Schmitt; Kelsi N. Singer

Plutos atmospheric haze settles out rapidly compared with geological timescales. It needs to be accounted for as a surface material, distinct from Plutos icy bedrock and from the volatile ices that migrate via sublimation and condensation on seasonal timescales. This paper explores how a steady supply of atmospheric haze might affect three distinct provinces on Pluto. We pose the question of why they each look so different from one another if the same haze material is settling out onto all of them. Cthulhu is a more ancient region with comparatively little present-day geological activity, where the haze appears to simply accumulate over time. Sputnik Planitia is a very active region where glacial convection, as well as sublimation and condensation rapidly refresh the surface, hiding recently deposited haze from view. Lowell Regio is a region of intermediate age featuring very distinct coloration from the rest of Pluto. Using a simple model haze particle as a colorant, we are not able to match the colors in both Lowell Regio and Cthulhu. To account for their distinct colors, we propose that after arrival at Plutos surface, haze particles may be less inert than might be supposed from the low surface temperatures. They must either interact with local materials and environments to produce distinct products in different regions, or else the supply of haze must be non-uniform in time and/or location, such that different products are delivered to different places.


Icarus | 2017

Long-term surface temperature modeling of Pluto

A.M. Earle; Richard P. Binzel; Leslie A. Young; S. A. Stern; Kimberly Ennico; William M. Grundy; Catherine B. Olkin; H.A. Weaver


Icarus | 2015

Pluto’s insolation history: Latitudinal variations and effects on atmospheric pressure

A.M. Earle; Richard P. Binzel


Icarus | 2017

Physical State and Distribution of Materials at the Surface of Pluto from New Horizons LEISA Imaging Spectrometer

B. Schmitt; S. Philippe; William M. Grundy; D. C. Reuter; R. Côte; Eric Quirico; Silvia Protopapa; Leslie A. Young; Richard P. Binzel; Jason C. Cook; Dale P. Cruikshank; C.M. Dalle Ore; A.M. Earle; Kimberly Ennico; Carly Howett; D. E. Jennings; Ivan R. Linscott; Allen W. Lunsford; Catherine B. Olkin; Alex H. Parker; J. Wm. Parker; Kelsi N. Singer; John R. Spencer; John Arthur Stansberry; S. A. Stern; C. C. C. Tsang; Anne Jacqueline Verbiscer; H.A. Weaver


Icarus | 2017

Past epochs of significantly higher pressure atmospheres on Pluto

S. A. Stern; Richard P. Binzel; A.M. Earle; Kelsi N. Singer; Leslie A. Young; H.A. Weaver; Catherine B. Olkin; Kimberly Ennico; J. M. Moore; William B. McKinnon; John R. Spencer

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Richard P. Binzel

University of Texas at Austin

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Catherine B. Olkin

Southwest Research Institute

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Leslie A. Young

Southwest Research Institute

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Jason C. Cook

Southwest Research Institute

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Alex H. Parker

Southwest Research Institute

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H.A. Weaver

Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

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