Posted on 09/15/2015 7:38:43 AM PDT by Enlightened1
The New Horizons probe has sent back the latest images from its historic July 14 flyby of Pluto. While the first close-up photos of the dwarf planet, taken from 7800 miles above the surface, had the New Horizons teamand people around the worldgiddy with excitement about intriguing features like 11,000-foot-tall ice mountains, the latest, downlinked over Labor Day weekend, have left them scratching their heads.
"If an artist had painted this Pluto before our flyby, I probably would have called it over the topbut thats what is actually there," said New Horizons principal investigator Alan Stern, of the Southwest Research Institute (SwRI), in a press statement.
The latest high-res images reveal a bevy of diverse features on Pluto's surface, including possible dunes, nitrogen ice flows oozing from mountains, networks of valleys perhaps carved by material flowing over Plutos surface, and "chaotically jumbled mountains reminiscent of disrupted terrains on Jupiters icy moon Europa," according to the statement.
The high-res mosaic image above, taken from 50,000 miles above the surface, shows Sputnik Planumthe smooth, bright plain in the centersurrounded by a wild diversity of landscapes, including those chaotically jumbled mountains.
The below image, a 220-mile-wide swath of the same region also photographed from 50,000 miles up, shows deeper detail of the planet's geological landforms, including dark, ancient heavily cratered terrain; bright, smooth geologically young terrain; assembled masses of mountains; and an enigmatic field of dark, aligned ridges that resemble dunes whose "origin is under debate," the press statement notes. The smallest visible features are just a half-mile in size.
(Excerpt) Read more at mentalfloss.com ...
Now THAT is fascinating !
Maybe one day we’ll learn enough to create our own Solar System, on the computer at least.
I’m loving this. All of my life, Pluto has been nothing but a little white fuzzy thing on a black background with a whole bunch of other little white fuzzy things. Thanks for posting.
I think once nuclear-powered ion propulsion becomes viable (which could cut the travel time of the next trip to Pluto from ten years to less than one!), we need to put a orbiter around that planet. In short, Pluto is way more interesting than anyone envisaged.
#LittlePlanetsMatter
Ah, the Plutonian Crater Monster.
I don’t see the flag Neil Armstrong planted.
That ant lion must be ‘uge.
And series.
I’ve seen THEM.
Thanks Enlightened1, extra to APoD.
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