The Commercial Appeal

Photos confirm ocean beneath Pluto’s shell

- Khrysgiana Pineda

Pictures from NASA’S New Horizons space probe confirm that Pluto harbors an ocean beneath its thick, icy shell, researcher­s report in a new study.

Contrary to the original “cold start” belief that Pluto was once a block of ice that has warmed through radioactiv­e decay, experts now believe the planet was once hot and contained early oceans that are still present today.

Pluto, an icy dwarf planet half the size of the United States, is in the Kuiper Belt about 3.6 billion miles away from the sun.

It has a methane, nitrogen and carbon monoxide atmosphere.

Pluto’s surface temperatur­e of minus-378 to minus-396 degrees is too cold to sustain life, according to NASA.

New Horizons, launched in 2006, was the only spacecraft to visit Pluto. It sailed past in 2015.

“For a long time people have thought about the thermal evolution of Pluto and the ability of an ocean to survive to the present day,” Francis Nimmo, professor of Earth and planetary sciences at the University of California-santa Cruz, said in a statement.

“Now that we have images of Pluto’s surface from NASA’S New Horizons mission, we can compare what we see with the prediction­s of different thermal evolution models.”

Along with Pluto, other large Kuiper Belt objects, such as dwarf planets Eris and Makemake, are thought to have had “hot starts.”

“Even in this cold environmen­t so far from the sun, all these worlds might have formed fast and hot, with liquid oceans,” Carver Bierson, the study’s lead author and UCSC graduate student, said in a statement.

Shifting tectonics created varying surface textures overtime that allowed experts to recognize whether the ice was melting or freezing and when, which provided a timeline of Pluto’s surface changes, Bierson said.

“If it started cold and the ice melted internally, Pluto would have contracted and we should see compressio­n features on its surface, whereas if it started hot it should have expanded as the ocean froze and we should see extension features on the surface,” Bierson said.

“We see lots of evidence of expansion, but we don’t see any evidence of compressio­n, so the observatio­ns are more consistent with Pluto starting with a liquid ocean.”

 ?? NASA/JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY VIA AP ?? Sputnik Planitia – the left lobe of Pluto’s “heart” – is believed to be an impact basin filled in with lavas (cryogenic ices).
NASA/JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY VIA AP Sputnik Planitia – the left lobe of Pluto’s “heart” – is believed to be an impact basin filled in with lavas (cryogenic ices).

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