all the Light in the image comes from the sun and the shadows are cast by the mountains blocking that sunlightGiacomoFalcucci wrote:Dear All,
Good morning!
What stunning images!!
Who casts the shadows in Norgay region?
Is it the Sun or Charon?
Thanks and best
G
APOD: Fly Over Pluto (2015 Jul 18)
Re: APOD: Fly Over Pluto (2015 Jul 18)
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Re: APOD: Fly Over Pluto (2015 Jul 18)
OK Tombaugh region has to be an impact crater on the left with ejecta moving out to the right up and down. I've a feeling this was some large slow moving object that made a splash but also a slump/wave of ice that formed the mountain ranges as well.
The polygonal patterns in the flat plain area are just convection cells from the cooling and freezing of the lake left after the impact.
The polygonal patterns in the flat plain area are just convection cells from the cooling and freezing of the lake left after the impact.
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Re: APOD: Fly Over Pluto (2015 Jul 18)
An impact on solid ice or an ice/rock mixture doesn't leave a lake. That scenario is only plausible if the crust is very thin and there's a liquid sea underneath. Possible, but still not known.madtom1999 wrote:OK Tombaugh region has to be an impact crater on the left with ejecta moving out to the right up and down. I've a feeling this was some large slow moving object that made a splash but also a slump/wave of ice that formed the mountain ranges as well.
The polygonal patterns in the flat plain area are just convection cells from the cooling and freezing of the lake left after the impact.
Chris
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Re: APOD: Fly Over Pluto (2015 Jul 18)
Perhaps not a lake but I can imagine the shocked ice forming a slush that would take a while to solidify.
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Re: APOD: Fly Over Pluto (2015 Jul 18)
I doubt it. If the impact is in solid material, most of it will be ejected. Even if there's slush in the bottom, we're going to be left with a crater, not a plain.madtom1999 wrote:Perhaps not a lake but I can imagine the shocked ice forming a slush that would take a while to solidify.
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Re: APOD: Fly Over Pluto (2015 Jul 18)
I would bow to Chris' wisdom on this. I would ask him one quick thing, if he has a moment to reply. It may not be possible so far out and in such coldness but I wonder if the friction of impact could potentially cause any amount of temperature increase leading to liquefaction or, at least, a lessening of the hard nature of the ices that could be permit an impact area to developing a mare type of appearance? Or is it just too, plain cold out there for such things?
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Re: APOD: Fly Over Pluto (2015 Jul 18)
I'm sure that an impact produces melting, and even in the near vacuum some liquid will persist for a bit. But what I'd expect would be a fairly typical crater, with some evidence of that melt on the walls and bottom. But we don't see craters at all. So the options are that there hasn't been cratering (which seems unlikely), or the surface has been remodeled fairly recently.Pianosorplanets wrote:I would bow to Chris' wisdom on this. I would ask him one quick thing, if he has a moment to reply. It may not be possible so far out and in such coldness but I wonder if the friction of impact could potentially cause any amount of temperature increase leading to liquefaction or, at least, a lessening of the hard nature of the ices that could be permit an impact area to developing a mare type of appearance? Or is it just too, plain cold out there for such things?
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Re: APOD: Fly Over Pluto (2015 Jul 18)
Have you seen the latest image? Craters are plentiful in the dark region of the new picture.
http://www.nasa.gov/press-release/nasa- ... or-july-24
http://www.nasa.gov/press-release/nasa- ... or-july-24
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Re: APOD: Fly Over Pluto (2015 Jul 18)
Yes, and even in some of the earlier pictures. But I wouldn't say "plentiful". Nevertheless, this supports the idea of resurfacing rather than a lack of impacts. It's just that the resurfacing process isn't uniform over the entire surface.geckzilla wrote:Have you seen the latest image? Craters are plentiful in the dark region of the new picture.
http://www.nasa.gov/press-release/nasa- ... or-july-24
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Re: APOD: Fly Over Pluto (2015 Jul 18)
I think a lot of details have been lost during compression. It seems especially bad where the craters are. Only the ones with high contrast light material seem to be outlined. It will be nice to look at the uncompressed imagery when it comes in to see if there are any low-contrast craters in there.
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Re: APOD: Fly Over Pluto (2015 Jul 18)
This image of Enceladus shows a fairly well cratered region near the southern pole Tiger Striped region. On an icy body with a probable ocean below
Re: APOD: Fly Over Pluto (2015 Jul 18)
This would be the area that has been dubbed "The Whale" at the area where the Whales Head meets the Heartgeckzilla wrote:Have you seen the latest image? Craters are plentiful in the dark region of the new picture.
http://www.nasa.gov/press-release/nasa- ... or-july-24
This area also reminds me of Iapetus