The reddish polar region on
Pluto's largest moon, Charon, is an effect of methane gas escaping from the icy
dwarf planet's atmosphere, say scientists who solved the mystery behind the
coloured region first spotted by NASA's New Horizons spacecraft last year.
Methane gas escapes from Pluto's atmosphere, becomes
"trapped" by the moon's gravity and freezes to the cold, icy surface
at Charon's pole, researchers said. This is followed by chemical processing by
ultraviolet light from the Sun that transforms the methane into heavier
hydrocarbons and eventually into reddish organic materials called tholins, they
said.
"Who would have thought that Pluto is a graffiti artist, spray-painting its companion with a reddish stain that covers an area the size of New Mexico?" said Will Grundy, a New Horizons co-investigator from Lowell Observatory in the US.
"Nature is amazingly inventive in using the basic laws of
physics and chemistry to create spectacular landscapes," Grundy said. The
team combined analyses from detailed Charon images obtained by New Horizons
with computer models of how ice evolves on Charon's poles.
Mission scientists had
previously speculated that methane from Pluto's atmosphere was trapped in
Charon's north pole and slowly converted into the reddish material, but had no
models to support that theory.
Researchers dug into the data to determine whether conditions on
the moon (with a diameter of 1,212 km) could allow the capture and processing
of methane gas. The models using Pluto and Charon's 248-year orbit around the
Sun show some extreme weather at Charon's poles, where 100 years of continuous
sunlight alternate with another century of continuous darkness.
Surface temperatures during
these long winters dip to minus 257 degrees Celsius, cold enough to freeze
methane gas into a solid. "The methane molecules bounce around on Charon's
surface until they either escape back into space or land on the cold pole,
where they freeze solid, forming a thin coating of methane ice that lasts until
sunlight comes back in the spring," Grundy said.
But while the methane ice
quickly sublimates away, the heavier hydrocarbons created from it remain on the
surface. The models also suggested that in Charon's springtime the returning
sunlight triggers conversion of the frozen methane back into gas.
However, while the methane ice quickly sublimates away, the
heavier hydrocarbons created from this evaporative process remain on the
surface. Sunlight further irradiates those leftovers into reddish material -
called tholins - that has slowly accumulated on Charon's poles over millions of
years.
New Horizons' observations of
Charon's other pole, currently in winter darkness - and seen by New Horizons
only by light reflecting from Pluto, or "Pluto-shine" - confirmed
that the same activity was occurring at both poles.
Source: ndtv.com
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