Towering ice volcanoes identified on surprisingly vibrant Pluto
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[March 30, 2022]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A batch of
dome-shaped ice volcanoes that look unlike anything else known in our
solar system and may still be active have been identified on Pluto using
data from NASA's New Horizons spacecraft, showing that this remote
frigid world is more dynamic than previously known.
Scientists said on Tuesday that these cryovolcanoes - numbering perhaps
10 or more - stand anywhere from six-tenths of a mile (1 km) to 4-1/2
miles (7 km) tall. Unlike Earth volcanoes that spew gases and molten
rock, this dwarf planet's cryovolcanoes extrude large amounts of ice -
apparently frozen water rather than some other frozen material - that
may have the consistency of toothpaste, they said.
Features on the asteroid belt dwarf planet Ceres, Saturn's moons
Enceladus and Titan, Jupiter's moon Europa and Neptune's moon Triton
also have been pegged as cryovolcanoes. But those all differ from
Pluto's, the researchers said, owing to different surface conditions
such as temperature and atmospheric pressure, as well as different mixes
of icy materials.
"Finding these features does indicate that Pluto is more active, or
geologically alive, than we previously thought it would be," said
planetary scientist Kelsi Singer of the Southwest Research Institute in
Boulder, Colorado, lead author of the study published in the journal
Nature Communications https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-022-29056-3.
"The combination of these features being geologically recent, covering a
vast area and most likely being made of water ice is surprising because
it requires more internal heat than we thought Pluto would have at this
stage of its history," Singer added.
Pluto, which is smaller than Earth's moon and has a diameter of about
1,400 miles (2,380 km), orbits about 3.6 billion miles (5.8 billion km)
away from the sun, roughly 40 times farther than Earth's orbit. Its
surface features plains, mountains, craters and valleys.
Images and data analyzed in the new study, obtained in 2015 by New
Horizons, validated previous hypotheses about cryovolcanism on Pluto.
The study found not only extensive evidence for cryovolcanism but also
that it has been long-lived, not a single episode, said Southwest
Research Institute planetary scientist Alan Stern, the New Horizons
principal investigator and study co-author.
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A perspective view of Pluto's icy volcanic region is seen based on
2015 data from the NASA spacecraft New Horizons. NASA/Johns Hopkins
University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research
Institute/Isaac Herrera/Kelsi Singer/Handout via REUTERS
"What's most fascinating about Pluto
is that it's so complex - as complex as the Earth or Mars despite
its smaller size and high distance from the sun," Stern said. "This
was a real surprise from the New Horizons flyby, and the new result
about cryovolcanism re-emphasizes this in a dramatic way."
The researchers analyzed an area southwest of Sputnik Planitia,
Pluto's large heart-shaped basin filled with nitrogen ice. They
found large domes 18-60 miles (30-100 km) across, sometimes
combining to form more complexly shaped structures.
An elevation called Wright Mons, one of the
tallest, may have formed from several volcanic domes merging,
yielding a shape unlike any Earth volcanoes. Although shaped
differently, it is similar in size to Hawaii's large volcano Mauna
Loa.
Like Earth and our solar system's other planets, Pluto formed about
4.5 billion years ago. Based on an absence of impact craters that
normally would accumulate over time, it appears its cryovolcanoes
are relatively recent - formed in the past few hundred million
years.
"That is young on a geologic timescale. Because there are almost no
impact craters, it is possible these processes are ongoing even in
the present day," Singer said.
Pluto has lots of active geology, including flowing nitrogen ice
glaciers and a cycle in which nitrogen ice vaporizes during the day
and condenses back to ice at night - a process constantly changing
the planetary surface.
"Pluto is a geological wonderland," Singer said. "Many areas of
Pluto are completely different from each other. If you just had a
few pieces of a puzzle of Pluto you would have no idea what the
other areas looked like."
(Reporting by Will Dunham, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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