Kuwait Times

‘Surprising’ methane dunes found on Pluto

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TAMPA: Pluto is covered with surprising dunes made of methane ice, which have formed relatively recently despite the frigid dwarf planet’s very thin atmosphere, internatio­nal researcher­s said. Pluto’s atmosphere has a surface pressure 100,000 times lower than Earth’s, which researcher­s suspected might be too little to allow tiny grains of solid methane to mobilize and become airborne.

Yet mild winds blowing across Pluto’s surface at speeds of some 19-25 miles per hour have forged these ripples at the border of an ice plain and mountain range, said the report in the journal Science. “The likely source of the dune grains is methane ice blown from nearby mountains,” said the Science report. “Although nitrogen ice cannot be ruled out.”

The dunes are scattered across a belt-like area some 45 miles across, and were spotted with NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft when it flew by in 2015, said the report. “When we first saw the New Horizons images, we thought instantly that these were dunes but it was really surprising because we know there is not much of an atmosphere,” said co-author Jani Radebaugh, associate professor in the department of geological sciences at Brigham Young University. “However despite being 30 times further away from the Sun as the Earth, it turns out Pluto still has Earthlike characteri­stics.”

Other cosmic bodies that are known to have dunes-besides Earth-include Mars and Venus, as well as Saturn’s moon Titan and the comet 67P/ Churyumov-Gerasimenk­o. “We knew that every solar system body with an atmosphere and a solid rocky surface has dunes on it, but we didn’t know what we’d find on Pluto,” said lead author Matt Telfer, lecturer in physical geography at the University of Plymouth.

“It turns out that even though there is so little atmosphere, and the surface temperatur­e is around -230 Celsius (382 Fahrenheit), we still get dunes forming.” Scientists also believe the dunes, which seem undisturbe­d, likely formed within the last 500,000 years, possibly much more recently. On Earth, to form such dunes with sand requires stronger winds, said co-author Eric Parteli, lecturer in Computatio­nal Geoscience­s at the University of Cologne.

“The considerab­ly lower gravity of Pluto, and the extremely low atmospheri­c pressure, means the winds needed to maintain sediment transport can be a hundred times lower,” he said. On Pluto, solar radiation also causes temperatur­e gradients in the granular ice layer, which contribute­s to the ability of dunes to form. “Together, we have found that these combined processes can form dunes under normal, everyday wind conditions on Pluto,” Parteli said.

 ?? —AFP ?? This highest-resolution file image from NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft taken December 4, 2015 and obtained June 1, 2018, shows great blocks of Pluto’s water-ice crust appearing jammed together in the informally named al-Idrisi mountains, some mountain...
—AFP This highest-resolution file image from NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft taken December 4, 2015 and obtained June 1, 2018, shows great blocks of Pluto’s water-ice crust appearing jammed together in the informally named al-Idrisi mountains, some mountain...

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