The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Pluto’s largest moon likely fractured by sub-surface ocean — NASA

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WASHINGTON: Images from the New Horizon space probe suggest that Pluto’ s moon Char on once had a sub-surface ocean that has since frozen and expanded, causing the surface to stretch and fracture, NASA said Friday.

Charon’s surface was photograph­ed by the New Horizons’s Lorri (Long-Range Reconnaiss­ance I mag er) camera as the spacecraft flew past the moon in July 2015 at a distance of 78,700 kilometres.

The detailed pictures show a system of ‘pull-apart’ tectonic faults on the moon’s equator.

These faults and fractures run “at least about 1,800 kilometres long and in places there are chasms 7.5 kilometres deep. By comparison, the Grand Canyon is 446 kilometres long and just over 1.6 kilometres deep,” NASA said.

The chasms are the longest ever observed in the solar system, NASA said.

Charon’s outer layer today is mainly water ice. But millions of years ago, when Charon was young, scientists believe that layer was kept warm “by heat provided by the decay of radioactiv­e elements, as well as Charon’s own internal heat of formation.”

The moon could have been warm enough to cause the water ice to melt deep down, creating a subsurface ocean.

“But as Charon cooled over time, this ocean would have frozen and expanded( as happens when water freezes), lifting the outer most layer soft he moon and producing the massive chasms we see today,” NASA said. Pluto, a dwarf planet in the far reaches of the solar system some 5.8 billion kilometres away from the sun, has five moons. Charon, with a diameter about half that of Pluto, is the largest of them.

Other moons in the solar system that are closer to the sun still have liquid oceans under their surface. Experts believe that oceans on Europa, one of Jupiter’s moons, and on two of Saturn’s moons, Ganymede and Enceladus, are the best places in the solar system to look for microbial life forms. — AFP

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