Near the western edge of the ice field known as Sputnik Planum, giant sheets of water ice can be fractured and rearranged, producing what Moore refers to as “anarchic terrain.” Jumbled chains of angular blocks, some as much as 25 miles (40 kilometers) across and 3 miles (5 kilometers) high, form mountains that stretch chaotically near the otherwise smooth, young plain. New analyses suggest that Sputnik Planum could be just 10 million years old. It was basically “born yesterday,” Stern said. “It’s a huge finding, that small planets can be active, on a massive scale, billions of years after their formation.”
Some parts of Pluto’s surface, such as Sputnik Planum, are incredibly smooth. Others are curiously pitted or look like
an alien version of snakeskin. Still other regions are riven with enormous fractures, such as Virgil Fossa, to the west of Sputnik Planum. Such cracks look as though they formed when Pluto expanded and busted up its crust, and that may be just what they are. “A slowly cooling and freezing ocean will lead to expansions,” explained
Bill McKinnon of Washington University in St. Louis. If Pluto’s crust conceals a buried water ocean—as scientists think is likely—then as that ocean slowly freezes and grows, it could be stressing Pluto’s crust and producing these enormous fissures.
Small, Cool Atmosphere
Before the flyby, scientists thought Pluto
had a puffy atmosphere that was maybe seven or eight times as voluminous as Pluto. That atmosphere, primarily nitrogen, was also thought to be escaping so fast that some 0.6 mile (1 kilometer) of ice on the Pluto surface would have sublimated and vanished over its 4.6-billion-year lifespan.
Now New Horizons scientists say that idea is almost completely wrong. Pluto’s atmosphere isn’t nearly as voluminous as they had anticipated, and it isn’t escaping nearly as quickly as predicted. “With the new rate, it’s something like half a foot [of vanished ice],” says
Leslie Young of the Southwest Research Institute. Most of Pluto’s nitrogen is instead staying close to the dwarf planet. Though puzzling, the observation could be explained by the presence of hydrogen cyanide high in Pluto’s atmosphere. Nobody expected to find hydrogen cyanide in such quantities, but it would have a significant cooling effect on the atmosphere, keeping it snuggled in close to Pluto.
Misbehaving Moons
Pluto’s four small moons have finally been revealed, and Nix, Styx, Kerberos, and Hydra are, like most things about this system, weirder than scientists had guessed. Kerberos and Hydra look as though they’re made of two smaller objects that slowly collided and stuck together, similar to
the duck-shaped comet that the Rosetta spacecraft is now orbiting. “At some point in the past, there were more than just the four [small] moons of Pluto—there were at least six,”
Mark Showalterof the SETI Institute, said at a press conference.
Adding to the weirdness are the rapid rotation rates of the small moons. Hydra wins the race, spinning around itself once every 10 hours, but all the moons are pirouetting more quickly than expected. “We simply have not seen a satellite system that does this,” Showalter said. Plus, Nix has an odd, reddish crater on one face that scientists can’t fully explain yet. And Kerberos,
which scientists guessed would be the dark sheep of the bunch, is actually just as bright as its three small siblings.
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