[meteorite-list] Pluto May Have Comet-Like Tail

From: Richard Montgomery <rickmont_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Fri, 22 Apr 2011 17:38:51 -0700
Message-ID: <0AC70E6412A24D36BE374357F36EAC25_at_bosoheadPC>

Ron et al,

Here are a few more neophyte questions:

Has the term "dwarf" so far and recently been attributed soley to Pluto's
rocky size with no regard for undiscovered atmosphere anomolies cited here?
And to whit, what about our gas-planets stature in the planet definition?

-Richard Montgomery


----- Original Message -----
From: "Ron Baalke" <baalke at zagami.jpl.nasa.gov>
To: "Meteorite Mailing List" <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>
Sent: Friday, April 22, 2011 1:24 PM
Subject: [meteorite-list] Pluto May Have Comet-Like Tail



http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/arxiv/26667/?ref=rss

Pluto May Have Comet-Like Tail
The Physics arXiv Blog
April 20, 2011

The latest measurements of Pluto's tenuous atmosphere indicate that it
may be shaped into a comet-like tail, say astronomers

Pluto's has a highly elliptical orbit that takes it inside the orbit of
Neptune and then out into the distant icy reaches of the Solar System.

Astronomers have long believed that this would have important effects on
the dwarf planet's atmosphere. Their models indicate that Pluto's
atmosphere is likely to swell as it moves closer to the Sun and the
poles sublimate. Later, the atmosphere should condense as it cools down.

That should make the surface of Pluto a barren windswept land that
constantly changes as it is battered by supersonic winds. Indeed, Hubble
images show that Pluto's surface has a number of interesting features
that seem to be changing.

In recent years, other evidence has emerged to back up suspicions that
Pluto is more complex than astronomers initially imagined.

Today, Jan Greaves at the University of St Andrews in Scotland and a
couple of buddies reveal the details of their own study of Pluto's
atmosphere using the 15 meter James Clerk Maxwell Telescope in Hawaii.

These guys find clear evidence of gaseous carbon dioxide at altitudes of
up to four times Pluto's radius. And they say there is significantly
more of the stuff than the last time CO was detected in 2000.

That's strange. Pluto is currently moving away from the Sun after its
closest approach in 1989 and ought to be cooling down. One explanation
is that the south pole has recently come out of shadow for the first
time in 120 years and for a short time may be evaporating more quickly
than the north pole is condensing.

But Greaves and co's most interesting discovery is a small red shift in
the CO spectrum indicating that Pluto's atmosphere must be moving away
from Earth in an unexpected way.

Their tentative explanation is exciting: "The marginal CO line
red-shift, if real, could indicate a ??,ow forming into a comet-like tail
directed away from the Sun," they say.

The thinking is that the expanding atmosphere is interacting with the
solar wind and being shaped into a tail.

That could throw the cat among the pigeons next time Pluto's status as a
planet comes up for discussion. It gives ammunition to the naysayers who
can now claim that far from being a planet or even a dwarf planet, Pluto
is merely a giant comet.

Astronomers will find out more in the coming years. The world's
telescopes will be increasingly trained on Pluto as the arrival of the
New Horizons mission draws near. Its flyby is scheduled for 2105.

Ref: arxiv.org/abs/1104.3014 <http://arxiv.org/abs/1104.3014>: Discovery
Of Carbon Monoxide In The Upper Atmosphere Of Pluto
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Received on Fri 22 Apr 2011 08:38:51 PM PDT


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