Windsor Star

Pluto photos a case of love at first sight

Dwaft planet holds surprises for scientists

- MARCIA DUNN

CAPE CANAVERAL — Mankind’s first close-up look at Pluto did not disappoint Wednesday: The pictures showed ice mountains on Pluto about as high as the Rockies and canyons on its big moon Charon that appear deeper than those on Earth.

Especially astounding to scientists was the absence of craters in a zoom-in shot of Pluto, the dwarf planet that hosted its first visitor from Earth on Tuesday, NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft.

They said that suggests to their surprise that Pluto is geological­ly active even now and is being sculpted not by outside forces but by internal heat.

The long- awaited images were unveiled Wednesday in Maryland, home to mission operations for NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft.

“I don’t think any one of us could have imagined that it was this good of a toy store,” principal scientist Alan Stern said at a news conference. He marvelled: “The Pluto system IS something wonderful.”

Added Lowell Observator­y’s Will Grundy: “This is what we came for.”

“This exceeds what we came for,” corrected deputy project scientist Cathy Olkin.

The zoom-in of Pluto, showing an approximat­ely 240-kilometre swath of the planet, reveals a mountain range about 3,350 metres high and tens of kilometres wide. John Spencer, a planetary scientist at Southweste­rn Research Institute, said the mountains appeared to be formed from Pluto’s icy bedrock.

The canyons on Charon look to be five kilometres to nine kilometres deep.

The images were collected as New Horizons swept within 12,000 kilometres of Pluto on Tuesday. Scientists didn’t know until Tuesday night — when the spacecraft phoned home — that the encounter was a success.

Travelling at more than 48,000 km/h, New Horizons — the size of a baby grand piano — is the fastest spacecraft ever launched. At about $700 million, it was a modest expense by spacefarin­g standards.

And its measuremen­ts may yet yield crucial clues about how the early solar system evolved and how life began.

The journey began 9 1/ 2 years ago, back when Pluto was still considered a full-fledged planet. The U.S. is now the only country to have visited every planet in the solar system (Pluto’s unconscion­able downgradin­g to a “dwarf planet” notwithsta­nding).

New Horizons is expected to observe Pluto’s four moons.

It will take until late 2016 for all data to reach Earth.

New Horizons already has confirmed Pluto is, indeed, the King of the Kuiper Belt. New measuremen­ts it made show that Pluto is 2,370 kilometres in diameter, or about 80 kilometres bigger than estimated.

That’s still puny by solarsyste­m standards. Pluto is just two-thirds the size of Earth’s moon. But it is big enough to be the largest object in the Kuiper Belt, a zone rife with tens of thousands of small bodies.

 ?? NASA/APL/SwRI via Getty Images ?? In this handout provided by the National Aeronautic­s and Space Administra­tion, a close-up image taken by the New Horizons spacecraft
as it passed by the dwarf planet shows a region near Pluto’s equator featuring a range of mountains rising as high as...
NASA/APL/SwRI via Getty Images In this handout provided by the National Aeronautic­s and Space Administra­tion, a close-up image taken by the New Horizons spacecraft as it passed by the dwarf planet shows a region near Pluto’s equator featuring a range of mountains rising as high as...

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