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The Pluto−Charon System
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Pluto orbits the Sun at a mean distance of 39.5 AU (astronomical units; 1 AU is the mean distance between the Earth and the Sun), with an orbital period of 248 Earth years. Its orbit is just eccentric enough to cross that of Neptune. They never collide thanks to a 2:3 mean-motion resonance: Pluto completes two orbits of the Sun for every three by Neptune. The Pluto system consists of Pluto and its large satellite Charon, plus four small satellites: Styx, Nix, Kerberos, and Hydra. Pluto and Charon are spherical bodies, with diameters of 2,377 and 1,212 km, respectively. They are tidally locked to one another such that each spins about its axis with the same 6.39-day period as their mutual orbit about their common barycenter. Pluto’s surface is dominated by frozen volatiles nitrogen, methane, and carbon monoxide. Their vapor pressure supports an atmosphere with multiple layers of photochemical hazes. Pluto’s equator is marked by a belt of dark red maculae, where the photochemical haze has accumulated over time. Some regions are ancient and cratered, while others are geologically active via processes including sublimation and condensation, glaciation, and eruption of material from the subsurface. The surfaces of the satellites are dominated by water ice. Charon has dark red polar stains produced from chemistry fed by Pluto’s escaping atmosphere.
The existence of a planet beyond Neptune had been postulated by Percival Lowell and William Pickering in the early 20th century to account for supposed clustering in comet aphelia and perturbations of the orbit of Uranus. Both lines of evidence turned out to be spurious, but they motivated a series of searches that culminated in Clyde Tombaugh’s discovery of Pluto in 1930 at the observatory Lowell had founded in Arizona. Over subsequent decades, basic facts about Pluto were hard-won through application of technological advances in astronomical instrumentation. During the progression from photographic plates through photoelectric photometers to digital array detectors, space-based telescopes, and ultimately, direct exploration by robotic spacecraft, each revealed more about Pluto. A key breakthrough came in 1978 with the discovery of Charon by Christy and Harrington. Charon’s orbit revealed the mass of the system. Observations of stellar occultations constrained the sizes of Pluto and Charon and enabled the detection of Pluto’s atmosphere in 1988. Spectroscopic instruments revealed Pluto’s volatile ices. In a series of mutual events from 1985 through 1990, Pluto and Charon alternated in passing in front of the other as seen from Earth. Observations of these events provided additional constraints on their sizes and albedo patterns and revealed their distinct compositions. The Hubble Space Telescope’s vantage above Earth’s atmosphere enabled further mapping of Pluto’s albedo patterns and the discovery of the small satellites. NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft flew through the system in 2015. Its instruments mapped the diversity and compositions of geological features on Pluto and Charon and provided detailed information on Pluto’s atmosphere and its interaction with the solar wind.
Title: The Pluto−Charon System
Description:
Pluto orbits the Sun at a mean distance of 39.
5 AU (astronomical units; 1 AU is the mean distance between the Earth and the Sun), with an orbital period of 248 Earth years.
Its orbit is just eccentric enough to cross that of Neptune.
They never collide thanks to a 2:3 mean-motion resonance: Pluto completes two orbits of the Sun for every three by Neptune.
The Pluto system consists of Pluto and its large satellite Charon, plus four small satellites: Styx, Nix, Kerberos, and Hydra.
Pluto and Charon are spherical bodies, with diameters of 2,377 and 1,212 km, respectively.
They are tidally locked to one another such that each spins about its axis with the same 6.
39-day period as their mutual orbit about their common barycenter.
Pluto’s surface is dominated by frozen volatiles nitrogen, methane, and carbon monoxide.
Their vapor pressure supports an atmosphere with multiple layers of photochemical hazes.
Pluto’s equator is marked by a belt of dark red maculae, where the photochemical haze has accumulated over time.
Some regions are ancient and cratered, while others are geologically active via processes including sublimation and condensation, glaciation, and eruption of material from the subsurface.
The surfaces of the satellites are dominated by water ice.
Charon has dark red polar stains produced from chemistry fed by Pluto’s escaping atmosphere.
The existence of a planet beyond Neptune had been postulated by Percival Lowell and William Pickering in the early 20th century to account for supposed clustering in comet aphelia and perturbations of the orbit of Uranus.
Both lines of evidence turned out to be spurious, but they motivated a series of searches that culminated in Clyde Tombaugh’s discovery of Pluto in 1930 at the observatory Lowell had founded in Arizona.
Over subsequent decades, basic facts about Pluto were hard-won through application of technological advances in astronomical instrumentation.
During the progression from photographic plates through photoelectric photometers to digital array detectors, space-based telescopes, and ultimately, direct exploration by robotic spacecraft, each revealed more about Pluto.
A key breakthrough came in 1978 with the discovery of Charon by Christy and Harrington.
Charon’s orbit revealed the mass of the system.
Observations of stellar occultations constrained the sizes of Pluto and Charon and enabled the detection of Pluto’s atmosphere in 1988.
Spectroscopic instruments revealed Pluto’s volatile ices.
In a series of mutual events from 1985 through 1990, Pluto and Charon alternated in passing in front of the other as seen from Earth.
Observations of these events provided additional constraints on their sizes and albedo patterns and revealed their distinct compositions.
The Hubble Space Telescope’s vantage above Earth’s atmosphere enabled further mapping of Pluto’s albedo patterns and the discovery of the small satellites.
NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft flew through the system in 2015.
Its instruments mapped the diversity and compositions of geological features on Pluto and Charon and provided detailed information on Pluto’s atmosphere and its interaction with the solar wind.
Related Results
A Pluto–Charon Sonata. III. Growth of Charon from a Circum-Pluto Ring of Debris
A Pluto–Charon Sonata. III. Growth of Charon from a Circum-Pluto Ring of Debris
Abstract
Current theory considers two options for the formation of the Pluto–Charon binary. In the hit-and-run model, a lower mass projectile barely hits the more ma...
Spectrophotometry of Pluto-Charon Mutual Events: Individual Spectra of Pluto and Charon
Spectrophotometry of Pluto-Charon Mutual Events: Individual Spectra of Pluto and Charon
Time-resolved spectra of the 3 March and 4 April 1987 mutual events of Pluto and its satellite Charon were obtained with spectral coverage from 5,500 to 10,000 angstroms with 25 an...
A Pluto–Charon Concerto: An Impact on Charon as the Origin of the Small Satellites
A Pluto–Charon Concerto: An Impact on Charon as the Origin of the Small Satellites
Abstract
We consider a scenario where the small satellites of Pluto and Charon grew within a disk of debris from an impact between Charon and a trans-Neptunian objec...
Viscous relaxation of Pluto's ice shell below Sputnik Planitia
Viscous relaxation of Pluto's ice shell below Sputnik Planitia
AbstractThe surface of Pluto is dominated by the Sputnik Planitia basin, possibly caused by an impact ~ 4 Gyr ago. To explain basin's unlikely position close to tidal axis with Cha...
Viscous relaxation of Pluto’s clathrate-insulated ice shell below Sputnik Planitia
Viscous relaxation of Pluto’s clathrate-insulated ice shell below Sputnik Planitia
AbstractSputnik Planitia, a 1000 km wide, Pluto-dominating feature, is located very close to Pluto-Charon tidal axis. To explain its position, a reorientation driven by a postimpac...
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