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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.


Science | 2016

The atmosphere of Pluto as observed by New Horizons

G. R. Gladstone; S. A. Stern; Kimberly Ennico; Catherine B. Olkin; H.A. Weaver; Leslie A. Young; Michael E. Summers; Darrell F. Strobel; David P. Hinson; Joshua A. Kammer; Alex H. Parker; Andrew Joseph Steffl; Ivan R. Linscott; Joel Wm. Parker; Andrew F. Cheng; David C. Slater; Maarten H. Versteeg; Thomas K. Greathouse; Kurt D. Retherford; H. Throop; Nathaniel J. Cunningham; W. W. Woods; Kelsi N. Singer; C. C. C. Tsang; Eric Schindhelm; Carey Michael Lisse; Michael L. Wong; Yuk L. Yung; Xun Zhu; W. Curdt

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’s atmosphere is cold, rarefied, and made mostly of nitrogen and methane, with layers of haze. INTRODUCTION For several decades, telescopic observations have shown that Pluto has a complex and intriguing atmosphere. But too little has been known to allow a complete understanding of its global structure and evolution. Major goals of the New Horizons mission included the characterization of the structure and composition of Pluto’s atmosphere, as well as its escape rate, and to determine whether Charon has a measurable atmosphere. RATIONALE The New Horizons spacecraft included several instruments that observed Pluto’s atmosphere, primarily (i) the Radio Experiment (REX) instrument, which produced near-surface pressure and temperature profiles; (ii) the Alice ultraviolet spectrograph, which gave information on atmospheric composition; and (iii) the Long Range Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI) and Multispectral Visible Imaging Camera (MVIC), which provided images of Pluto’s hazes. Together, these instruments have provided data that allow an understanding of the current state of Pluto’s atmosphere and its evolution. RESULTS The REX radio occultation determined Pluto’s surface pressure and found a strong temperature inversion, both of which are generally consistent with atmospheric profiles retrieved from Earth-based stellar occultation measurements. The REX data showed near-symmetry between the structure at ingress and egress, as expected from sublimation driven dynamics, so horizontal winds are expected to be weak. The shallow near-surface boundary layer observed at ingress may arise directly from sublimation. The Alice solar occultation showed absorption by methane and nitrogen and revealed the presence of the photochemical products acetylene and ethylene. The observed nitrogen opacity at high altitudes was lower than expected, which is consistent with a cold upper atmosphere. Such low temperatures imply an additional, but as yet unidentified, cooling agent. A globally extensive haze extending to high altitudes, and with numerous embedded thin layers, is seen in the New Horizons images. The haze has a bluish color, suggesting a composition of very small particles. The observed scattering properties of the haze are consistent with a tholin-like composition. Buoyancy waves generated by winds flowing over orography can produce vertically propagating compression and rarefaction waves that may be related to the narrow haze layers. Pluto’s cold upper atmosphere means atmospheric escape must occur via slow thermal Jeans’ escape. The inferred escape rate of nitrogen is ~10,000 times slower than predicted, whereas that of methane is about the same as predicted. The low nitrogen loss rate is consistent with an undetected Charon atmosphere but possibly inconsistent with sublimation/erosional features seen on Pluto’s surface, so that past escape rates may have been much larger at times. Capture of escaping methane and photochemical products by Charon, and subsequent surface chemical reactions, may contribute to the reddish color of its north pole. CONCLUSION New Horizons observations have revolutionized our understanding of Pluto’s atmosphere. The observations revealed major surprises, such as the unexpectedly cold upper atmosphere and the globally extensive haze layers. The cold upper atmosphere implies much lower escape rates of volatiles from Pluto than predicted and so has important implications for the volatile recycling and the long-term evolution of Pluto’s atmosphere. MVIC image of haze layers above Pluto’s limb. About 20 haze layers are seen from a phase angle of 147°. The layers typically extend horizontally over hundreds of kilometers but are not exactly horizontal. For example, white arrows on the left indicate a layer ~5 km above the surface, which has descended to the surface at the right. Observations made during the New Horizons flyby provide a detailed snapshot of the current state of Pluto’s atmosphere. Whereas the lower atmosphere (at altitudes of less than 200 kilometers) is consistent with ground-based stellar occultations, the upper atmosphere is much colder and more compact than indicated by pre-encounter models. Molecular nitrogen (N2) dominates the atmosphere (at altitudes of less than 1800 kilometers or so), whereas methane (CH4), acetylene (C2H2), ethylene (C2H4), and ethane (C2H6) are abundant minor species and likely feed the production of an extensive haze that encompasses Pluto. The cold upper atmosphere shuts off the anticipated enhanced-Jeans, hydrodynamic-like escape of Pluto’s atmosphere to space. It is unclear whether the current state of Pluto’s atmosphere is representative of its average state—over seasonal or geologic time scales.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Pluto's interaction with the solar wind

D. J. McComas; H. A. Elliott; S. Weidner; P. Valek; E. J. Zirnstein; Fran Bagenal; P. A. Delamere; R. W. Ebert; H. O. Funsten; Mihaly Horanyi; Ralph L. McNutt; C. Moser; N. A. Schwadron; Darrell F. Strobel; Leslie A. Young; Kimberly Ennico; Catherine B. Olkin; S. A. Stern; Harold A. Weaver

This study provides the first observations of Plutogenic ions and their unique interaction with the solar wind. We find ~20% solar wind slowing that maps to a point only ~4.5 RP upstream of Pluto and a bow shock most likely produced by comet-like mass loading. The Pluto obstacle is a region of dense heavy ions bounded by a “Plutopause” where the solar wind is largely excluded and which extends back >100 RP into a heavy ion tail. The upstream standoff distance is at only ~2.5 RP. The heavy ion tail contains considerable structure, may still be partially threaded by the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF), and is surrounded by a light ion sheath. The heavy ions (presumably CH4+) have average speed, density, and temperature of ~90 km s−1, ~0.009 cm−3, and ~7 × 105 K, with significant variability, slightly increasing speed/temperature with distance, and are N-S asymmetric. Density and temperature are roughly anticorrelated yielding a pressure ~2 × 10−2 pPa, roughly in balance with the interstellar pickup ions at ~33 AU. We set an upper bound of <30 nT surface field at Pluto and argue that the obstacle is largely produced by atmospheric thermal pressure like Venus and Mars; we also show that the loss rate down the tail (~5 × 1023 s−1) is only ~1% of the expected total CH4 loss rate from Pluto. Finally, we observe a burst of heavy ions upstream from the bow shock as they are becoming picked up and tentatively identify an IMF outward sector at the time of the NH flyby.


The Astronomical Journal | 1997

HST High-Resolution Images and Maps of Pluto

S. A. Stern; Marc William Buie; Laurence M. Trafton

We have obtained Hubble Space Telescope (HST) images of Pluto at 410 nm and 278 nm which resolve numerous distinct albedo provinces on this planet. Our images were obtained using the Faint Object Camera (FOC) of the Hubble Space Telescope between 20 June and 01 July 1994. This dataset is the rst longitudinally-complete, rotationallyresolved direct image dataset on Pluto. We have combined the various images that HST obtained to make maps of the planet. These images reveal that Pluto has (i) a highly variegated surface, (ii) extensive, bright, asymmetric polar regions, (iii) large midlatitude and equatorial spots, and (iv) possible linear features hundreds of kilometers in extent. The dynamic range of albedo features across the planet detected at the FOCs resolution in both the 410 nm and 278 nm bandpasses exceeds 5:1. We also present and discuss the multiplicative product of the HST 410 nm and 278 nm maps, which allows us to infer the location of where the cleanest, and therefore the presumably freshest ice deposits, lie. Toward the end of this report, we make some initial comparisons between the HST-derived maps and previously published Pluto maps derived from the inversion of groundbased lightcurves of Pluto. Although more-sophisticated HST-map inversions are planned, the data products presented here provide important inputs to modellers interested in volatile transport, and comparative studies of Pluto and Triton. 1


The Astrophysical Journal | 2000

The Discovery of Argon in Comet C/1995 O1 (Hale-Bopp)

S. A. Stern; David C. Slater; Michel C. Festou; J. Wm. Parker; G. R. Gladstone; Michael F. A’Hearn; Erik Wilkinson

On 1997 March 30.14, we observed the EUV spectrum of the bright comet C/1995 O1 (Hale-Bopp) at the time of its perihelion, using our Extreme Ultraviolet Spectrograph sounding-rocket telescope/spectrometer. The spectra reveal the presence H Lyβ, O+, and, most notably, argon. Modeling of the retrieved Ar production rates indicates that comet Hale-Bopp is enriched in Ar relative to cosmogonic expectations. This in turn indicates that Hale-Bopps deep interior has never been exposed to the 35-40 K temperatures necessary to deplete the comets primordial argon supply.


Nature | 2016

Convection in a volatile nitrogen-ice-rich layer drives Pluto's geological vigour.

William B. McKinnon; Francis Nimmo; Teresa Wong; Paul M. Schenk; Oliver L. White; James H. Roberts; J. M. Moore; John R. Spencer; Alan D. Howard; Orkan M. Umurhan; S. A. Stern; H.A. Weaver; Cathy Olkin; Leslie A. Young; K. E. Smith; Imaging Theme Team

The vast, deep, volatile-ice-filled basin informally named Sputnik Planum is central to Plutos vigorous geological activity. Composed of molecular nitrogen, methane, and carbon monoxide ices, but dominated by nitrogen ice, this layer is organized into cells or polygons, typically about 10 to 40 kilometres across, that resemble the surface manifestation of solid-state convection. Here we report, on the basis of available rheological measurements, that solid layers of nitrogen ice with a thickness in excess of about one kilometre should undergo convection for estimated present-day heat-flow conditions on Pluto. More importantly, we show numerically that convective overturn in a several-kilometre-thick layer of solid nitrogen can explain the great lateral width of the cells. The temperature dependence of nitrogen-ice viscosity implies that the ice layer convects in the so-called sluggish lid regime, a unique convective mode not previously definitively observed in the Solar System. Average surface horizontal velocities of a few centimetres a year imply surface transport or renewal times of about 500,000 years, well under the ten-million-year upper-limit crater retention age for Sputnik Planum. Similar convective surface renewal may also occur on other dwarf planets in the Kuiper belt, which may help to explain the high albedos shown by some of these bodies.


Science | 2016

Pluto’s interaction with its space environment: Solar wind, energetic particles, and dust

Fran Bagenal; Mihaly Horanyi; D. J. McComas; Ralph L. McNutt; H. A. Elliott; Matthew Hill; L. E. Brown; P. A. Delamere; P. Kollmann; S. M. Krimigis; M. Kusterer; C. M. Lisse; D. G. Mitchell; M. Piquette; A. R. Poppe; Darrell F. Strobel; J. R. Szalay; P. Valek; Jon D. Vandegriff; S. Weidner; E. J. Zirnstein; S. A. Stern; Kimberly Ennico; Catherine B. Olkin; Harold A. Weaver; Leslie A. Young

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 modifies its space environment, interacting with the solar wind plasma and energetic particles. INTRODUCTION The scientific objectives of NASA’s New Horizons mission include quantifying the rate at which atmospheric gases are escaping Pluto and describing its interaction with the surrounding space environment. The two New Horizons instruments that measure charged particles are the Solar Wind Around Pluto (SWAP) instrument and the Pluto Energetic Particle Spectrometer Science Investigation (PEPSSI) instrument. The Venetia Burney Student Dust Counter (SDC) counts the micrometer-sized dust grains that hit the detectors mounted on the ram direction of the spacecraft. This paper describes preliminary results from these three instruments when New Horizons flew past Pluto in July 2015 at a distance of 32.9 astronomical units (AU) from the Sun. RATIONALE Initial studies of the solar wind interaction with Pluto’s atmosphere suggested that the extent of the interaction depends on whether the atmospheric escape flux is strong (producing a comet-like interaction, where the interaction region is dominated by ion pick-up and is many times larger than the object) or weak (producing a Mars-like interaction dominated by ionospheric currents with limited upstream pick-up and where the scale size is comparable to the object). Before the New Horizons flyby, the estimates of the atmospheric escape rate ranged from as low as 1.5 × 1025 molecules s–1 to as high as 2 × 1028 molecules s–1. Combining these wide-ranging predictions of atmospheric escape rates with Voyager and New Horizons observations of extensive variability of the solar wind at 33 AU produced estimates of the scale of the interaction region that spanned all the way from 7 to 1000 Pluto radii (RP). RESULTS At the time of the flyby, SWAP measured the solar wind conditions near Pluto to be nearly constant and stronger than usual. The abnormally high solar wind density and associated pressures for this distance are likely due to a relatively strong traveling interplanetary shock that passed over the spacecraft 5 days earlier. Heavy ions picked up sunward from Pluto should mass-load and slow the solar wind. However, there is no evidence of such solar wind slowing in the SWAP data taken as near as ~20 RP inbound, which suggests that very few atmospheric molecules are escaping upstream and becoming ionized. The reorientation of the spacecraft to enable imaging of the Pluto system meant that both the SWAP and PEPSSI instruments were turned away from the solar direction, thus complicating our analysis of the particle data. Nevertheless, when the spacecraft was ~10 RP from Pluto, SWAP data indicated that the solar wind had slowed by ~20%. We use these measurements to estimate a distance of ~6 RP for the 20% slowing location directly upstream of Pluto. At this time, PEPSSI detected an enhancement of ions with energies in the kilo–electron volt range. The SDC, which measures grains with radii >1.4 µm, detected one candidate impact in ±5 days around its closest approach, indicating a dust density estimate of n = 1.2 km–3, with a 90% confidence level range of 0.6 < n < 4.6 km–3. CONCLUSION New Horizons’s particle instruments revealed an interaction region confined sunward of Pluto to within ~6 RP. The surprisingly small size is consistent with a reduced atmospheric escape rate of 6 × 1025 CH4 molecules s–1, as well as a particularly high solar wind flux due to a passing compression region. This region is similar in scale to the solar wind interaction with Mars’s escaping atmosphere. Beyond Pluto, the disturbance persists to distances greater than 400 RP downstream. Interaction of the solar wind with Pluto’s extended atmosphere. Protons and electrons streaming from the Sun at ~400 km s–1 are slowed and deflected around Pluto because of a combination of ionization of Pluto’s atmosphere and electrical currents induced in Pluto’s ionosphere. CREDIT: STEVE BARTLETT AND NASA’S SCIENTIFIC VISUALIZATION STUDIO The New Horizons spacecraft carried three instruments that measured the space environment near Pluto as it flew by on 14 July 2015. The Solar Wind Around Pluto (SWAP) instrument revealed an interaction region confined sunward of Pluto to within about 6 Pluto radii. The region’s surprisingly small size is consistent with a reduced atmospheric escape rate, as well as a particularly high solar wind flux. Observations from the Pluto Energetic Particle Spectrometer Science Investigation (PEPSSI) instrument suggest that ions are accelerated and/or deflected around Pluto. In the wake of the interaction region, PEPSSI observed suprathermal particle fluxes equal to about 1/10 of the flux in the interplanetary medium and increasing with distance downstream. The Venetia Burney Student Dust Counter, which measures grains with radii larger than 1.4 micrometers, detected one candidate impact in ±5 days around New Horizons’ closest approach, indicating an upper limit of <4.6 kilometers–3 for the dust density in the Pluto system.


Science | 2016

The Small Satellites of Pluto as Observed by New Horizons

H.A. Weaver; Marc William Buie; Bonnie J. Buratti; William M. Grundy; Tod R. Lauer; Catherine B. Olkin; Alex H. Parker; Simon B. Porter; Mark R. Showalter; John R. Spencer; S. A. Stern; Anne Jacqueline Verbiscer; William B. McKinnon; J. M. Moore; Stuart J. Robbins; Paul M. Schenk; Kelsi N. Singer; Olivier S. Barnouin; Andrew F. Cheng; Carolyn M. Ernst; Carey Michael Lisse; D. E. Jennings; Allen W. Lunsford; D. C. Reuter; Douglas P. Hamilton; David E. Kaufmann; Kimberly Ennico; Leslie A. Young; Ross A. Beyer; Richard P. Binzel

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’s rapidly rotating small moons have bright icy surfaces with impact craters. INTRODUCTION The Pluto system is surprisingly complex, comprising six objects that orbit their common center of mass in approximately a single plane and in nearly circular orbits. When the New Horizons mission was selected for flight by NASA in 2001, only the two largest objects were known: the binary dwarf planets Pluto and Charon. Two much smaller moons, Nix and Hydra, were discovered in May 2005, just 8 months before the launch of the New Horizons spacecraft, and two even smaller moons, Kerberos and Styx, were discovered in 2011 and 2012, respectively. The entire Pluto system was likely produced in the aftermath of a giant impact between two Pluto-sized bodies approximately 4 to 4.5 billion years ago, with the small moons forming within the resulting debris disk. But many details remain unconfirmed, and the New Horizons results on Pluto’s small moons help to elucidate the conditions under which the Pluto system formed and evolved. RATIONALE Pluto’s small moons are difficult to observe from Earth-based facilities, with only the most basic visible and near-infrared photometric measurements possible to date. The New Horizons flyby enabled a whole new category of measurements of Pluto’s small moons. The Long Range Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI) provided high–spatial resolution panchromatic imaging, with thousands of pixels across the surfaces of Nix and Hydra and the first resolved images of Kerberos and Styx. In addition, LORRI was used to conduct systematic monitoring of the brightness of all four small moons over several months, from which the detailed rotational properties could be deduced. The Multispectral Visible Imaging Camera (MVIC) provided resolved color measurements of the surfaces of Nix and Hydra. The Linear Etalon Imaging Spectral Array (LEISA) captured near-infrared spectra (in the wavelength range 1.25 to 2.5 μm) of all the small moons for compositional studies, but those data have not yet been sent to Earth. RESULTS All four of Pluto’s small moons are highly elongated objects with surprisingly high surface reflectances (albedos) suggestive of a water-ice surface composition. Kerberos appears to have a double-lobed shape, possibly formed by the merger of two smaller bodies. Crater counts for Nix and Hydra imply surface ages of at least 4 billion years. Nix and Hydra have mostly neutral (i.e., gray) colors, but an apparent crater on Nix’s surface is redder than the rest of the surface; this finding suggests either that the impacting body had a different composition or that material with a different composition was excavated from below Nix’s surface. All four small moons have rotational periods much shorter than their orbital periods, and their rotational poles are clustered nearly orthogonal to the direction of the common rotational poles of Pluto and Charon. CONCLUSION Pluto’s small moons exhibit rapid rotation and large rotational obliquities, indicating that tidal despinning has not played the dominant role in their rotational evolution. Collisional processes are implicated in determining the shapes of the small moons, but collisional evolution was probably limited to the first several hundred million years after the system’s formation. The bright surfaces of Pluto’s small moons suggest that if the Pluto-Charon binary was produced during a giant collision, the two precursor bodies were at least partially differentiated with icy surface layers. Pluto’s family of satellites. NASA’s New Horizons mission has resolved Pluto’s four small moons, shown in order of their orbital distance from Pluto (from left to right). Nix and Hydra have comparable sizes (with equivalent spherical diameters of ~40 km) and are much larger than Styx and Kerberos (both of which have equivalent spherical diameters of ~10 km). All four of these moons are highly elongated and are dwarfed in size by Charon, which is nearly spherical with a diameter of 1210 km. The scale bars apply to all images. The New Horizons mission has provided resolved measurements of Pluto’s moons Styx, Nix, Kerberos, and Hydra. All four are small, with equivalent spherical diameters of ~40 kilometers for Nix and Hydra and ~10 kilometers for Styx and Kerberos. They are also highly elongated, with maximum to minimum axis ratios of ~2. All four moons have high albedos (~50 to 90%) suggestive of a water-ice surface composition. Crater densities on Nix and Hydra imply surface ages of at least 4 billion years. The small moons rotate much faster than synchronous, with rotational poles clustered nearly orthogonal to the common pole directions of Pluto and Charon. These results reinforce the hypothesis that the small moons formed in the aftermath of a collision that produced the Pluto-Charon binary.


Science | 2009

The Shape and Surface Variation of 2 Pallas from the Hubble Space Telescope

Britney E. Schmidt; Peter C. Thomas; James Monie Bauer; J.-Y. Li; Lucy A. McFadden; Maximilian J. Mutchler; S. C. Radcliffe; Andrew Scott Rivkin; C. T. Russell; J. Wm. Parker; S. A. Stern

Protoplanet 2 Pallas With a diameter of 265 kilometers, 2 Pallas is one of the largest bodies in the main asteroid belt. Now Schmidt et al. (p. 275) have characterized its surface and shape using images from the Hubble Space Telescope. Color variations and topography were revealed that are possibly linked to the asteroids thermal evolution and to the formation of its orbital family—the population of asteroids that share the same properties as 2 Pallas and are thought to be the fragments of a collision. In particular, a large-impact crater was observed that could represent the source of the Pallas family. 2 Pallas represents the third intact protoplanet in the main asteroid belt, joining asteroids 1 Ceres and 4 Vesta. Like the asteroids Ceres and Vesta, 2 Pallas is a protoplanet that has remained intact since its formation. We obtained Hubble Space Telescope images of 2 Pallas in September 2007 that reveal distinct color and albedo variations across the surface of this large asteroid. Pallas’s shape is an ellipsoid with radii of 291 (±9), 278 (±9), and 250 (±9) kilometers, implying a density of 2400 (±250) kilograms per cubic meter—a value consistent with a body that formed from water-rich material. Our observations are consistent with the presence of an impact feature, 240 (±25) kilometers in diameter, within Pallas’s ultraviolet-dark terrain. Our observations imply that Pallas is an intact protoplanet that has undergone impact excavation and probable internal alteration.


Icarus | 2017

Global albedos of Pluto and Charon from LORRI New Horizons observations

Bonnie J. Buratti; Jason D. Hofgartner; Michael D. Hicks; H.A. Weaver; S. A. Stern; Thomas W. Momary; Joel A. Mosher; Ross A. Beyer; Anne Jacqueline Verbiscer; Amanda M. Zangari; Leslie A. Young; Carey Michael Lisse; Kelsi N. Singer; Andrew F. Cheng; William M. Grundy; Kimberly Ennico; Catherine B. Olkin

Abstract The exploration of the Pluto-Charon system by the New Horizons spacecraft represents the first opportunity to understand the distribution of albedo and other photometric properties of the surfaces of objects in the Solar Systems “Third Zone” of distant ice-rich bodies. Images of the entire illuminated surface of Pluto and Charon obtained by the Long Range Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI) camera provide a global map of Pluto that reveals surface albedo variegations larger than any other Solar System world except for Saturns moon Iapetus. Normal reflectances on Pluto range from 0.08–1.0, and the low-albedo areas of Pluto are darker than any region of Charon. Charon exhibits a much blander surface with normal reflectances ranging from 0.20–0.73. Plutos albedo features are well-correlated with geologic features, although some exogenous low-albedo dust may be responsible for features seen to the west of the area informally named Tombaugh Regio. The albedo patterns of both Pluto and Charon are latitudinally organized, with the exception of Tombaugh Regio, with darker regions concentrated at the Plutos equator and Charons northern pole. The phase curve of Pluto is similar to that of Triton, the large moon of Neptune believed to be a captured Kuiper Belt Object (KBO), while Charons is similar to that of the Moon. Preliminary Bond albedos are 0.25 ± 0.03 for Charon and 0.72 ± 0.07 for Pluto. Maps of an approximation to the Bond albedo for both Pluto and Charon are presented for the first time. Our work shows a connection between very high albedo (near unity) and planetary activity, a result that suggests the KBO Eris may be currently active.

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Leslie A. Young

Southwest Research Institute

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Catherine B. Olkin

Southwest Research Institute

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H.A. Weaver

Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

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G. R. Gladstone

Southwest Research Institute

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Richard P. Binzel

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Alex H. Parker

Southwest Research Institute

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J. Wm. Parker

Southwest Research Institute

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