APOD: 50 Miles on Pluto (2015 Jul 16)
Re: APOD: 50 Miles on Pluto (2015 Jul 16)
Could the apparent fact of Little cratering on Pluto/Charon be utilized as an argument in favor of Pluto Planet hood, Demonstrating that Pluto/Charon have in deed swept their neighborhood clear of debris? (Another one of the PLANET qualifications would be met) Then, relabeling it as Binary Planet PLUTO/CHARON rather than just Pluto places the Barycenter back within the boundary of the mass rather than outside the mass of Pluto
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Re: APOD: 50 Miles on Pluto (2015 Jul 16)
No, because it hasn't cleared its neighborhood. Its orbital zone includes multiple KBOs. Indeed, on most bodies, cratering is a better indicator of clearing their neighborhood than a lack of cratering!BMAONE23 wrote:Could the apparent fact of Little cratering on Pluto/Charon be utilized as an argument in favor of Pluto Planet hood, Demonstrating that Pluto/Charon have in deed swept their neighborhood clear of debris?
Chris
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Re: APOD: 50 Miles on Pluto (2015 Jul 16)
if a body slams into Pluto, does it melt the iceand then refreezes, for a brief period and " hides " the cratering ?
Wolf Kotenberg
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Re: APOD: 50 Miles on Pluto (2015 Jul 16)
ta152h0 wrote:
if a body slams into Pluto, does it melt the ice and then refreezes,
for a brief period and " hides " the cratering ?
- That sounds like an excellent suggestion to me, Wolf
Art Neuendorffer
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Re: APOD: 50 Miles on Pluto (2015 Jul 16)
I doubt it. The energy of impacts is generally too high to produce more than a little local melting. Most of the material would be vaporized or pulverized and ejected. Depending on the size of the impact, some would escape Pluto and some would settle back down as an ejecta blanket. So there would be nothing to fill in the crater- most of that material would have been removed.ta152h0 wrote:if a body slams into Pluto, does it melt the iceand then refreezes, for a brief period and " hides " the cratering ?
Chris
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Re: APOD: 50 Miles on Pluto (2015 Jul 16)
The Kuiper belt is basically all rotating in the same direction so Pluto (average orbital speed = 4.7 km/s) is likely to be involved with collisions of just a few km/s. I tried to work out a radioactive scenario but the heating is just way too low for such a small body.Chris Peterson wrote:I doubt it. The energy of impacts is generally too high to produce more than a little local melting.ta152h0 wrote:
if a body slams into Pluto, does it melt the ice and then refreezes, for a brief period and " hides " the cratering ?
Most of the material would be vaporized or pulverized and ejected.
Low speed Kuiper belt impacts must be major the source of heating, IMO.
Art Neuendorffer
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Re: APOD: 50 Miles on Pluto (2015 Jul 16)
I'll reserve judgment on that one. It doesn't seem plausible to me that this could constitute a major source of heating. But that's beside the point, which was simply that cratering events don't cause melting, they cause ejection of material. The lowest speed impact possible on Pluto is 1.3 km/s, and while this is less than the speed of sound in ice, it is nevertheless going to result in a significant ejection of material, not a temporarily liquid lake which will freeze over leaving no evidence of the impact. I expect that most impacts would result from scattered disc bodies, not KBOs, and therefore the speed range will be wider, extending above the speed of sound in ice in many cases. Whatever is resurfacing Pluto, I doubt it is impacts.neufer wrote:The Kuiper belt is basically all rotating in the same direction so Pluto (average orbital speed = 4.7 km/s) is likely to be involved with collisions of just a few km/s. I tried to work out a radioactive scenario but the heating is just way too low for such a small body.Chris Peterson wrote:I doubt it. The energy of impacts is generally too high to produce more than a little local melting.ta152h0 wrote: if a body slams into Pluto, does it melt the ice and then refreezes, for a brief period and " hides " the cratering ?
Most of the material would be vaporized or pulverized and ejected.
Low speed Kuiper belt impacts must be major the source of heating, IMO.
Chris
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Re: APOD: 50 Miles on Pluto (2015 Jul 16)
Chris Peterson wrote:I'll reserve judgment on that one. It doesn't seem plausible to me that this could constitute a major source of heating. But that's beside the point, which was simply that cratering events don't cause melting, they cause ejection of material. The lowest speed impact possible on Pluto is 1.3 km/s, and while this is less than the speed of sound in ice, it is nevertheless going to result in a significant ejection of material, not a temporarily liquid lake which will freeze over leaving no evidence of the impact. I expect that most impacts would result from scattered disc bodies, not KBOs, and therefore the speed range will be wider, extending above the speed of sound in ice in many cases. Whatever is resurfacing Pluto, I doubt it is impacts.neufer wrote:Click to play embedded YouTube video.
The Kuiper belt is basically all rotating in the same direction so Pluto (average orbital speed = 4.7 km/s) is likely to be involved with collisions of just a few km/s. I tried to work out a radioactive scenario but the heating is just way too low for such a small body.
Low speed Kuiper belt impacts must be major the source of heating, IMO.
- Anything big enough to punch through Pluto's nitrogen ice crust
is going to make quite a splash in a ~140 km thick Plutonian ice slushy ocean.
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Re: APOD: 50 Miles on Pluto (2015 Jul 16)
Indeed, if Pluto has such a thing. I'll reserve judgment on that, too.neufer wrote:
- Anything big enough to punch through Pluto's nitrogen ice crust
is going to make quite a splash in a ~140 km thick Plutonian ice slushy ocean.
Chris
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Re: APOD: 50 Miles on Pluto (2015 Jul 16)
There was a recent posting that imaged the Pluto=Charon waltz that would indicate feature erasing tidal forces ? I mean, you got two heavy dudes dancing with each other and they are each a non rfigid body, I think
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Re: APOD: 50 Miles on Pluto (2015 Jul 16)
With respect to one another, they're not dancing at all. They're mutually tidally locked, so neither sees any change in tidal forces from the other. Each is tidally deformed by the other, but that deformation is static. So there's no mechanism for heating or providing energy to drive tectonics.ta152h0 wrote:There was a recent posting that imaged the Pluto=Charon waltz that would indicate feature erasing tidal forces ? I mean, you got two heavy dudes dancing with each other and they are each a non rfigid body, I think
Chris
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