Pluto close-up: Spacecraft makes flyby of icy, mystery world after journey of 9 years

spaminator

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Pluto's frozen plains 'beautiful eye candy'
Area unofficially named after Sputnik
Marcia Dunn, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Friday, July 17, 2015 08:27 PM EDT | Updated: Friday, July 17, 2015 08:34 PM EDT
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- Vast frozen plains exist next door to Pluto's big, rugged mountains sculpted of ice, scientists said Friday, three days after humanity's first-ever flyby of the dwarf planet.
The New Horizons spacecraft team revealed close-up photos of those plains, which they're already unofficially calling Sputnik Planum after the world's first man-made satellite.
"Have a look at the icy frozen plains of Pluto," principal scientist Alan Stern said during a briefing at NASA headquarters. "Who would have expected this kind of complexity?"
Stern described the pictures coming down from 3 billion miles away as "beautiful eye candy."
"I'm still having to remind myself to take deep breaths," added Jeff Moore, head of the New Horizons geology team at NASA's Ames Research Center in California. "I mean, the landscape is just astoundingly amazing."
Spanning hundreds of miles, the plains are located in the prominent, bright, heart-shaped area of Pluto. Like the mountains unveiled Wednesday, the plains look to be a relatively young 100 million years old -- at the most. Scientists speculate internal heating -- perhaps from icy volcanoes or geysers-- might still be shaping these crater-free regions.
"This could be only a week old for all we know," Moore said. He stressed that scientists have no hard evidence of erupting, geyser-like plumes on Pluto -- yet.
Another possibility could be that the terrain, like frozen mud cracks on Earth, formed as a result of contraction of the surface.
The plains -- which include clusters of smooth hills and fields of small pits -- are covered with irregular-shaped, or polygon, sections that look to be separated by troughs. Each section is roughly 12 miles across.
The height of the hills is not yet known, nor their origin. It could be the hills were pushed up from below, or are knobs surrounded by eroded terrain, according to Moore. The fields of pits resemble glacial fields on Earth.
As of Friday's news conference, New Horizons was just over 2 million miles past Pluto and operating well. The spacecraft on Tuesday became the first visitor to the 4.5 billion-year-old Pluto, sweeping within 7,700 miles of its icy surface after a journey of 9 1/2 years. It represented the last planetary stop on NASA's grand tour of the solar system, begun a half-century ago.
"I'm a little biased, but I think the solar system saved the best for last," Stern, a Southwest Research Institute planetary scientist, told reporters.
On Wednesday -- just one day after the historic flyby -- Stern and his team unveiled zoom-in photos showing 11,000-foot mountain ranges on Pluto, akin to the Rockies here on Earth. The plains are the mountains' neighbours to the north. The peaks are now known, informally at least, as the Norgay Montes. Tenzing Norgay was the Sherpa guide for Sir Edmund Hillary when they conquered Mount Everest in 1953.
The huge, encompassing heart-shaped region already bears the last name of Clyde Tombaugh, the late American astronomer who discovered Pluto in 1930.
New Horizons' science team promised Friday that the data will allow them to produce elevation maps of both Pluto and its big moon Charon.
It will take 16 months to transmit to Earth all the data collected during the close encounter. The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland, is managing the $720 million mission, which began with a launch from Cape Canaveral, Florida, in 2006 -- months before Pluto was demoted from a full-fledged planet.
Stay tuned, meanwhile, for NASA's next Pluto update -- next Friday. The pictures should keep getting better and better.
"This is just a taste of what I'm sure is in the unsent data" yet to come, Moore said.
Pluto's frozen plains 'beautiful eye candy' | World | News | Toronto Sun
 

Blackleaf

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Some people say that no spacecraft has visited Pluto and that it's all a hoax. And they're also saying that the Europeans sent a probe to comet 67P because they found out it was a vast alien spacecraft.
 

spaminator

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NASA spacecraft shows Pluto wrapped in haze, ice flows
Marcia Dunn, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Friday, July 24, 2015 04:44 PM EDT | Updated: Friday, July 24, 2015 05:04 PM EDT
A stunning silhouette of Pluto taken by NASA's New Horizons spacecraft after it shot past the icy orb last week show an extensive layer of atmospheric haze, while close-up pictures of the ground reveal flows of nitrogen ice, scientists said on Friday.
New Horizons became the first spacecraft to visit Pluto and its entourage of moons and so far has returned about 5% of the pictures and science data collected in the days leading up to, during and immediately following the July 14 flyby.
The latest batch of images includes a backlit view of Pluto with sun, located more than 3 billion miles away, shining around and through the planet's atmosphere.
Analysis shows distinct layers of haze in Pluto's nitrogen, carbon monoxide and methane atmosphere. The haze extends at least 100 miles (161 km) off the surface.
"This is our first peek at weather in Pluto's atmosphere," New Horizons scientist Michael Summers, with George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia, told reporters during a teleconferenced press briefing.
As the tiny particles fall to the ground, they may trigger chemical reactions that give Pluto its reddish hue, he added.
The haze layer, which extends five times farther than predicted by computer models, was not the only surprise. Pressure measurements show the total mass of Pluto's atmosphere has halved in two years.
"That's pretty astonishing, at least to an atmospheric scientist. That tells you something is happening," Summers said.
More details will come over the next year as New Horizons sends recorded data back to Earth.
NASA also released new images of Pluto's surface, with telltale signs of a wide range of geologic activities including a Pluto version of glacial ice flows.
With surface temperatures just shy of 400 degrees below zero Fahrenheit (-235 degrees Celsius), Pluto is too cold for the ice to be made of water. Instead, Pluto's surface ice consists mostly of nitrogen.
"We knew that there was nitrogen ice on Pluto ... and we imagined that nitrogen was sublimating, or evaporating, in one place and condensing in another place. But to see evidence for recent geologic activity is simply a dream come true," said New Horizons scientist William McKinnon, with Washington University in St. Louis.
"Recent" in geological terms does not mean yesterday, he added. Based on the lack of impact craters, scientists suspect the surface of Pluto is less than a few hundred million years old, a fraction of the solar system's 4.6 billion year age.
NASA spacecraft shows Pluto wrapped in haze, ice flows | World | News | Toronto
 

WLDB

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Some people say that no spacecraft has visited Pluto and that it's all a hoax. And they're also saying that the Europeans sent a probe to comet 67P because they found out it was a vast alien spacecraft.

Those folks are keeping the tinfoil industry in business.
 

SLM

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Mar 5, 2011
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Some people say that no spacecraft has visited Pluto and that it's all a hoax. And they're also saying that the Europeans sent a probe to comet 67P because they found out it was a vast alien spacecraft.

Some folks insist dust is a paranormal experience.....but what are you gonna do?