An Oddly Alien-Looking Visage of Pluto

Take a Long Last Look at THIS Side of Pluto!

The CHaron-facing side of Pluto is showing some incredibly diverse landscape features just two days from flyby!  Courtesy NASA-JHUAPL-SWRI
The Charon-facing side of Pluto is showing some incredibly diverse landscape features just two days from flyby! Courtesy NASA-JHUAPL-SWRI

Wow.  I got off the plane today heading to Pluto Central and was greeted with tweets and retweets of the latest image of Pluto from New Horizons. And, what a weird place it’s showing us.  It reminded me of an alien Plutonian Cthulu, or maybe even a frozen Flying Spaghetti Monster.

Polygons and dark regions, circular landscape features — all on the Charon-facing side of Pluto. And, doesn’t THAT beg a lot of questions about why it looks like that!  We talked about it over dinner tonight, speculating about the processes that are causing the surface features and asking ourselves, “Does Charon have anything to do with the way Pluto looks? And, if so, what’s happening?”

I suspect we’ll hear more in the next couple of days about what those processes might be and how they’d work. So, I won’t speculate about that. But, I will say that this world is just delivering more and better surprises each day.  Just to give you an idea, the large dark areas you see on this image about 480 kilometers wide (about 300 miles), and they appear to be much more are more complex than could be make out in earlier images.

The mission scientists are, of course, eagerly dissecting the images, especially looking at the regularly space dark and light spots along the equator, plus the polygon-shaped regions above the equatorial belt. And, they’re asking a lot of questions of their own. Are there plateaus on the surface? Plains? Or, could Pluto be a ball with weird bright and dark variations on an otherwise smooth surface?  Do the circular regions imply impact craters?

I’m not sure all those questions will get answered right away, but they will -— eventually. In the meantime, the mission continues and flyby is just around the corner. Stay tuned!

“Houston, We Have Geology”

Pluto Lives!

The latest image from Pluto is showing distinct features on the planet's surface. NASA-JHUAPL-SWRI
The latest image from Pluto is showing distinct features on the planet’s surface. NASA-JHUAPL-SWRI
An annotated version of the Pluto image at left.  NASA. The reference globe shows that we are looking roughly at Pluto's north pole at the top left, and the dark regions are along the equator. NASA-JHUAPL-SWRI
An annotated version of the Pluto image above.
NASA. The reference globe shows that we are looking roughly at Pluto’s north pole at the top left, and the dark regions are along the equator. NASA-JHUAPL-SWRI

The world is waking up to a vision of Pluto that now tells us this planet is a dynamic place — not a frozen desert, but a world with landscapes that are still just enough out of focus that it’s tough to tell exactly what they are. According to Alan Stern, the features in this image are indicative of something quite exciting. There appear to be complex surface structures pictured in this new image sent back by New Horizons just yesterday. “In this new image are what appear to be polygonal features, a complex band of terrain stretching east-northeast across the planet, approximately 1,000 miles long; and a complex region where bright terrains meet the dark terrains of the whale,” he said. “After nine and a half years in flight, Pluto is well worth the wait.”

The shapes we’re seeing on Pluto indicate some kind of geological activity, although the details are (forgive me) still a bit fuzzy. There are a number of things that can make these shapes you see on the icy surface. Think about what it looks like as ice and snow melt (sublimate) here on Earth. If you have a dirty snowbank, for example, the snow can melt preferentially, leaving strange shapes behind. On Pluto, there are mixtures of ice on the surface, and they all react a little differently to solar heating and UV light. Also, if you have a heated bit of ground on Earth, snow melts preferentially over that (and also refreezes when temperatures drop).

I honestly don’t know what’s doing the shaping of Pluto’s surface, but it’s a dynamic process (meaning it’s happening in real time). If that truly bears out, and we should know more soon, then Pluto is very  much a “living” world, perhaps in much the same way that Triton at Neptune continues to spew geysers from beneath its surface, or Enceladus at Saturn does the same thing. The big questions now are: what’s causing these surface features, and what’s causing that process? Stay tuned!

Exploring Science and the Cosmos

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