Earlier this month, New Horizons released a batch of absolutely breathtaking
Now, by studying that haze more closely, the New Horizons science team thinks it’s found yet another likeness between the distant dwarf world and our own: sunbeams.
Pluto’s atmospheric haze — composed of nitrogen, methane, and complex hydrocarbons — is a mystery New Horizons researchers are just beginning to unpack. We’ve already identified at least a dozen distinct layers in the billowy atmosphere that extends up to 130 km (80 miles) above Pluto’s surface.
To learn more about the haze’s distinctive structure, scientists are “unwrapping” it — basically, using image processing tools to peel the circular horizon back into a straight line. This causes concentric layers to become stacked horizontal features, as illustrated in the bottom half of the image below:
Top: an image of the nightside of Pluto, backlight by the Sun. The same image has been unwrapped, such that the horizon stretches into a straight line. Image credit: NASA/JHUAPL/SwRI/Alex Parker
As New Horizons researcher Alex Parker explains, once we unwrap the haze, we can see that it appears brighter in the evening sky than the morning sky, perhaps suggesting some sort of diurnal weather cycle.
And there’s another feature that crops out prominently in the unwrapped images: bright traces, running inward along the planet’s edge well beyond the reach of the sun’s rays. These are sunbeams, produced when light hits particles in the atmosphere and scatters away between gaps in the dwarf world’s icy surface topography.
In addition to being downright beautiful, sunbeams have another implication: they suggest the atmospheric haze extends right down to the surface, “similar to a low cloud deck or a fog bank,” Parker writes.
There’s still so much to learn about this amazing little world, and there are plenty more images of Pluto’s skies to be downlinked and analyzed. But between sunbeams and rolling banks of fog, Pluto, at 3 billion miles from home, is feeling closer than ever.
[NASA]
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