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New Images Of Pluto From 7,750 Miles
#1
New Images Of Pluto From 7,750 Miles
Quote:The NASA mission exploring the Kuiper Belt—the remote corner of the solar system hosting, amongst others, Pluto and its moons—has beamed home an image of the dwarf planet taken at the closest range yet, about 7,750 miles from the surface of Pluto (or, as NASA itself said, from a distance similar that between Mumbai and New York City). A spacecraft known as New Horizons traveled for more than nine years and 3 billion miles to get the shot. This is the farthest out humankind has reached in the universe; it is spellbinding.
More close up pics of Pluto reveals a young mountain range of around 100 million years old, the possibility of an active interior.

[Image: Pluto.png]

http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/technology...id=DELLDHP


[Image: Pluto_Mountain_Range.jpg]
Quote:Especially astonishing to scientists was the total absence of impact craters in a zoom-in shot of one rugged slice of Pluto. They said that suggests that Pluto is geologically active even now and is being sculpted not by collisions with cosmic debris but by its internal heat

The zoom-in of Pluto, showing an approximately 150-mile swath of the planet, reveals a mountain range about 11,000 feet high and tens of miles wide. Scientists said the peaks — seemingly formed from Pluto's icy bedrock — appeared to be a mere 100 million years old. Pluto itself is 4.5 billion years old.

http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/technology...id=DELLDHP



Distance Facts:
http://distancefrom.facts.co/earthtoplut...dpluto.php
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#2
RE: New Images Of Pluto From 7,750 Miles
The relative absence of craters on Pluto is extremely remarkable. It would be interesting to learn what long lasting sources of energy is allowing so small a world to be continuously paving over the craters on its surface so long after its formation.
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#3
RE: New Images Of Pluto From 7,750 Miles
Maybe the non-co-planar orbit with the rest of the solar system provides some relative lack of rocks flying by?
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#4
RE: New Images Of Pluto From 7,750 Miles
The main repository of potential impact bodies in the region of Pluto would be the Keiper belt. Keiper belt is very thick. The average inclination of orbits of objects in it is probably around 10 degrees. So the inclination of pluto's orbit won't take it out of danger zone.

So pluto's lack of craters likely didn't result from scarcity of impacts. Much more likely is Pluto was resurfaced quite recently.

Also, Pluto has an atmosphere. Pluto's Gravity is too weak to hold on to a primordial atmosphere over the life of solar system. So the presence of atmosphere might suggest Pluto remains volcanically active and continues to out gas from its interior.
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#5
RE: New Images Of Pluto From 7,750 Miles
Please explain "resurfaced" Chuck! I'm getting interested...
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#6
RE: New Images Of Pluto From 7,750 Miles
(July 16, 2015 at 8:41 am)ignoramus Wrote: Please explain "resurfaced" Chuck! I'm getting interested...
Pluto has large percentage of water content.   The bedrock under its surface is made mostly of water ice.    At pluto's surface temperature water ice is very strong and stiff, stronger than most types of rocks on earth, and as strong and stiff as granite.  So in prevailing temperatures surface of Pluto behaves as if it was made from light but very strong rock, like granite, capable of supporting large verticle relief indefinitely, in other words allow impact craters to survive for as long as the age of solar system. 

 If the interior of Pluto remains warm, then there is probably an water or ice/slush mantle under pluto's solid crust.   If the interior is warm enough, then the solid ice crust could be relatively thin.   In this case, liquid water may periodically break through to the surface.   When warm water from deep mantle erupts onto a cold ice surface, it's called cryovolcano.    Much of the erupted water would instantly freeze, and then come back onto pluto's surface in a manner analogous to volcanic ash.   If the volume of eruption is large enough, not all the warm water may have time to freeze before it starts to flow like hot lava on the ice surface.   Either way, cryovolcano said would bury existing topolographies like craters.  This is what likely resurfaced Pluto, and erased most craters.
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#7
RE: New Images Of Pluto From 7,750 Miles
Another thing to consider is that Pluto has an atmosphere that freezes out during the Plutonian winter, and sublimates during the Plutonian summer. That can cause erosion which can erase craters and other features.
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#8
RE: New Images Of Pluto From 7,750 Miles
Would there be strong erosion if the gases of the atmosphere never undergo a liquid phase between summer and winter?    Erosive agent probably has to be able to transport away the eroded material and expose Fresh material for erosion to continue for the the agent to become persistently effective.   

There doesn't seem to be any runoff channels in the pictures seen so far?

Although the flat parts between hilly regions might be depositional surfaces.
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#9
RE: New Images Of Pluto From 7,750 Miles
(July 16, 2015 at 12:03 pm)orogenicman Wrote: Another thing to consider is that Pluto has an atmosphere that freezes out during the Plutonian winter, and sublimates during the Plutonian summer.  That can cause erosion which can erase craters and other features.
I don't recall where, but I remember reading a week or so that this phenomenon is questionable after some observations from New Horizons.
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#10
RE: New Images Of Pluto From 7,750 Miles
Poor Pluto:

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