New Horizons Finds Blue Skies, Water Ice on Pluto

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Allicrombie

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#1 Allicrombie
Member since 2005 • 26223 Posts

That's right OT, better start packing now !

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NASA’s New Horizons continues to amaze as it reveals more and more about Pluto and its family of moons. Recently, New Horizons dazzled us as it beamed back the first color images of Pluto, revealing a scaly, snakeskin-like surface. This week, we see Pluto’s hazy atmosphere in color for the first time, and surprise... it’s blue!

"Who would have expected a blue sky in the Kuiper Belt? It’s gorgeous," said Alan Stern, New Horizons principal investigator from Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) in Boulder, Colorado.

While the actual particles that make up the haze are most likely not blue, the color of the haze tells scientists a great deal. They think the particles within the haze are most likely red or gray; however, based on the blue tint, the science team can determine particle size and composition. "A blue sky often results from scattering of sunlight by very small particles," said science team researcher Carly Howett, also of SwRI. "On Earth, those particles are very tiny nitrogen molecules. On Pluto they appear to be larger – but still relatively small – soot-like particles we call tholins."

First detected in the upper atmosphere of Saturn’s moon Titan, tholin particles, like the ones on Pluto, are thought to form high in the atmosphere, and are produced by ultraviolet sunlight blasting atmospheric organic compounds. As essentially “complex organic gunk,” tholins can coat a planet or moon’s surface and come in a variety of colors depending on what molecules are present and how much radiation they receive. Lab experiments have shown that nitrogen and methane – both present in Pluto’s atmosphere – can yield red tholins. This can explain the red surface material on both Pluto and its largest moon Charon.

What makes this gunk so fascinating? Well, tholins could have implications for life on other worlds as scientists have produced the basic building blocks of life (amino acids) in tholin experiments. Tholins can also provide valuable insight into a planet's surface age and composition. This means if you have a world where tholins form regularly, any regions lacking the organic gunk would either be very young or could even be subjected to removal processes like rain.

As if blue haze wasn’t exciting enough, New Horizons had another surprise for us this week: water ice on Pluto’s surface. While there aren’t large areas of exposed ice, there are many small regions. The science team is currently investigating this discovery further, but thinks the regions of water ice might be more extensive than what we currently see, and it could be masked by other types of ices. Jason Cook, a Pluto science team member from SwRI, said in a statement: "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. Understanding why water appears exactly where it does, and not in other places, is a challenge that we are digging into."

Spectral analysis shows that the location of the water ice deposits seems to correlate with the bright red areas in the recently released color images. This is surprising and may indicate a relationship between the water ice and tholins that we don’t yet comprehend. "I’m surprised that this water ice is so red," says Silvia Protopapa, a science team member from the University of Maryland, College Park. "We don’t yet understand the relationship between water ice and the reddish tholin colorants on Pluto's surface."

New Horizons, currently 5 million kilometers (3.1 million miles) from Earth, is in the midst of a year-long process to beam back all the data collected during its flyby of the Pluto system.

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Catalli

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#2  Edited By Catalli  Moderator
Member since 2014 • 3453 Posts

But have they found any Mass Relays? :3

On a serious note, interesting. I wouldn't have guessed a blue-coloured atmosphere around Pluto. Nor ice for that matter!

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deactivated-5acfa3a8bc51d

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#3 deactivated-5acfa3a8bc51d
Member since 2005 • 7914 Posts

Neat I want to taste their water

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Allicrombie

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#4 Allicrombie
Member since 2005 • 26223 Posts

@ianhh6 said:

But have they found any Mass Relays? :3

Now that would have been a discovery !

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lamprey263

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#5 lamprey263  Online
Member since 2006 • 45482 Posts

Even the Moon has atmosphere, thought I hear it's oh so very negligible that for all practical purposes it's easier just to pretend it doesn't. It however has a particle density greater than the vacuum of the interplanetary medium. So, I mean when we say atmosphere on Pluto, how much of one are we talking about?

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#7 GazaAli
Member since 2007 • 25216 Posts

@Allicrombie said:
@ianhh6 said:

But have they found any Mass Relays? :3

Now that would have been a discovery !

I'm saving myself for them Asaris

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PcGamingRig

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#8 PcGamingRig
Member since 2009 • 7386 Posts

Wasn't there signs of flowing water confirmed on Mars recently as well? Hoping they will find the microbes they suspect are elsewhere in our solar system soon.

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horgen

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#9  Edited By horgen  Moderator
Member since 2006 • 127736 Posts

Whatever happened to frozen water?

Or just ice?

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#10 LexLas
Member since 2005 • 7317 Posts

So strange to start finding ice/water all over planets that was not there before ? or did we not have the technology ? Or are the aliens playing tricks on us ? Too strange.

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#11 branketra
Member since 2006 • 51726 Posts

Very awesome discovery. I wonder how much of an influence the origin of the solar system was in Pluto's current water content.