Latest Pluto Photos Reveal Flowing Ice

Fanghawk

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Latest Pluto Photos Reveal Flowing Ice

The latest photos from NASA's New Horizons probe show that Pluto's "heart" has nitrogen ice which flows like a glacier.[/B]

Since its discovery in 1930, Pluto was a more literal example of a faraway place with features we could only imagine. But now that <a href=http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/141562-NASAs-New-Horizons-Finally-Reaches-Pluto>NASA's New Horizons probe has reached its destination, we can finally <a href=http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/141587-Pluto-Probe-New-Horizons-Beams-Back-Close-Up-Shots-of-Dwarf-Planet-and-Its-Moons-but-Neil-DeGrasse-Tyson-Isnt-Impressed>get an up-close look at the distant dwarf planet. Naturally, we're already discovering fascinating things - such as what appears to be flowing ice that moves like glaciers.

"We've only seen surfaces like this on active worlds like Earth and Mars," mission co-investigator John Spencer said. "I'm really smiling."

The details are coming from close-up images of "Sputnik Planum", a Pluto plain roughly the size of Texas. Analysis revealed a sheet of ice that clearly flowed at one time, and possibly might still be in motion like our own glaciers. That's not to say its <a href=http://www.escapistmagazine.com/tag/view/water>"water" is the same composition as Earth's - composition data suggests the Sputnik Planum is rich with nitrogen, carbon monoxide, and methane ices. "At Pluto's temperatures of minus-390 degrees Fahrenheit, these ices can flow like a glacier," New Horizons Geology, Geophysics, and Imaging team deputy leader Bill McKinnon explained.

The Sputnik Planum can be found in the western half of Pluto's "heart", but it's not the only icy location. The heart's southernmost region - the terrifyingly dubbed "Cthulhu Regio" - appears to have much newer ice deposits. NASA scientists continue to study the photos for more data, so don't be surprised if we uncover more of Pluto's secrets soon.

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Source: <a href=http://www.nasa.gov/feature/new-horizons-discovers-flowing-ices-on-pluto>NASA, via <a href=https://earthsky.org/space/latest-images-of-plutos-flowing-ice>EarthSky

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Xeros

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Fanghawk said:
The heart's southernmost region - the terrifyingly dubbed "Cthulhu Regio"
No, no, no. Cthulhu is here, damn it! Beneath the waves of flowing, Earthy waters. There are at least 3 other Gods that have connections with Yuggoth and its denizens, and we still keep naming everything after Cthulhu.
 

Lightknight

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Are we anywhere close to having real video of these planets? This 2005 technology is bumming me out. Super excited to have all these pictures of Pluto and whatnot but how long until we have a decent enough modem on these suckers to transmit HD video or something like that?
 

The Rogue Wolf

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Lightknight said:
Are we anywhere close to having real video of these planets? This 2005 technology is bumming me out. Super excited to have all these pictures of Pluto and whatnot but how long until we have a decent enough modem on these suckers to transmit HD video or something like that?
When you're transmitting across five billion kilometers, you've got to keep things simple.
 

chimeracreator

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Lightknight said:
Are we anywhere close to having real video of these planets? This 2005 technology is bumming me out. Super excited to have all these pictures of Pluto and whatnot but how long until we have a decent enough modem on these suckers to transmit HD video or something like that?
Any tech NASA puts in a satellite or probe has to be proven to work in harsh conditions over a long period of time. That means that they intentionally stay five to ten years behind the state of the art since most of the time the state of the art is buggy, breaks easily and needs patches. Likewise you need to know the full details on the real world specs instead of what manufactures estimate their equipment can do. When something is that far away you can't patch it or replace it so you need to make sure it works the first time and blowing a $720,000,000 project because you went with the wrong video camera is a bad idea considering how much trouble they have with their budget already.
 

FPLOON

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Looks like this might be the realistic prequel to Lost Planet, I guess...

Other than that, can we harvest the ice for drinkable water?
 

Something Amyss

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FPLOON said:
Other than that, can we harvest the ice for drinkable water?
That's not to say its "water" is the same composition as Earth's - composition data suggests the Sputnik Planum is rich with nitrogen, carbon monoxide, and methane ices.
I'm going to guess no, based on the article.
 

Solo-Wing

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So Plutos heart is a vast frozen landscape?

I guess me and Pluto are one in the same.
 

FPLOON

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Zachary Amaranth said:
FPLOON said:
Other than that, can we harvest the ice for drinkable water?
That's not to say its "water" is the same composition as Earth's - composition data suggests the Sputnik Planum is rich with nitrogen, carbon monoxide, and methane ices.
I'm going to guess no, based on the article.
If we can turn water into wine when water wasn't edible to drink, I'm sure we could do the same with turning not-water into water... :p
 

Something Amyss

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FPLOON said:
If we can turn water into wine when water wasn't edible to drink, I'm sure we could do the same with turning not-water into water... :p
Yeah, but that was Jesus. How are we going to convince Space Jesus to go to Pluto?
 

Lightknight

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chimeracreator said:
Lightknight said:
Are we anywhere close to having real video of these planets? This 2005 technology is bumming me out. Super excited to have all these pictures of Pluto and whatnot but how long until we have a decent enough modem on these suckers to transmit HD video or something like that?
Any tech NASA puts in a satellite or probe has to be proven to work in harsh conditions over a long period of time. That means that they intentionally stay five to ten years behind the state of the art since most of the time the state of the art is buggy, breaks easily and needs patches. Likewise you need to know the full details on the real world specs instead of what manufactures estimate their equipment can do. When something is that far away you can't patch it or replace it so you need to make sure it works the first time and blowing a $720,000,000 project because you went with the wrong video camera is a bad idea considering how much trouble they have with their budget already.
Why can't they have mutually exclusive systems on board of a project that they get millions of dollars for? Seriously, strap a go-pro to the damn thing or whatever else we think will work in addition to the camera that's there.

If it works, then fantastic. If it doesn't then you maybe wasted a few thousand dollars of a hundreds of millions project.

The real reckless behavior is putting everything behind one system instead of having more redundancy.

The Rogue Wolf said:
Lightknight said:
Are we anywhere close to having real video of these planets? This 2005 technology is bumming me out. Super excited to have all these pictures of Pluto and whatnot but how long until we have a decent enough modem on these suckers to transmit HD video or something like that?
When you're transmitting across five billion kilometers, you've got to keep things simple.
Transmitting video is not inherently more complex than transmitting images. They're all still 1's and 0's.

It's just that video is usually a whole lot more 1's and 0's than pictures.
 

FPLOON

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Zachary Amaranth said:
FPLOON said:
If we can turn water into wine when water wasn't edible to drink, I'm sure we could do the same with turning not-water into water... :p
Yeah, but that was Jesus. How are we going to convince Space Jesus to go to Pluto?
By having Pluto cast the first stone! Unless Pluto has it out for Neil, this could be a problem if Pluto has a different target in mind...
 

Something Amyss

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FPLOON said:
By having Pluto cast the first stone! Unless Pluto has it out for Neil, this could be a problem if Pluto has a different target in mind...
I'm still concerned about the Reapers. This is just one step closer to discovering them.