Astronomy Picture of the Day |
APOD: 1999 February 13 - Pluto: The Frozen Planet
Explanation:
This portrait of Pluto and its companion
Charon was taken by the Hubble Space Telescope in 1994.
Pluto is usually the most distant planet from the
Sun but because of its
eccentric orbit Pluto crossed inside
of Neptune's orbit in 1979.
On Thursday, February 11th, it crossed back out, recovering
its status as
the most distant of
nine planets.
Pluto is
still considered to be a planet, although very little
is known about it compared to other planets.
Pluto is smaller than any
other planet and even smaller than
several other planet's moons.
Pluto is probably composed of frozen rock and ice,
much like Neptune's moon Triton.
Pluto has not yet been
visited by a spacecraft, but a
mission is being planned for the next decade.
APOD: 1998 July 8 - Mysterious Pluto and Charon
Explanation:
Pluto is the only planet in our
Solar System remaining unphotographed by a passing
spacecraft. Distant
Pluto and its moon Charon therefore remain somewhat mysterious.
In addition to
direct imaging by the
Hubble Space Telescope,
careful tracking of brightness changes that
occur as each object eclipses the other have
allowed astronomers to build up the
above black & white surface maps.
These maps depict the face of
Pluto (left)
that always faces Charon, and the face of Charon
that always faces away from
Pluto. The rectangular pixels are an artifact of the mapping software. The
Pluto-Kuiper Express mission is tentatively planned
for launch in 2003 and should encounter Pluto
around the year 2012.
APOD: 1996 March 11 - Hubble Telescope Maps Pluto
Explanation:
No spacecraft from Earth has yet explored Pluto
but astronomers have found ways of
mapping its surface.
A stunning map of
this distant, diminutive planet, the first based on
direct images, was revealed late last week in a
Hubble Space Telescope press release.
Above are two opposite hemisphere views of
the computer constructed
map of Pluto's surface (north is up).
The grid pattern is due to the computer technique used
where each grid element is over 100 miles across.
The map is based on Hubble images made when
Pluto was a mere 3 billion miles distant.
It shows strong brightness variations -
confirming and substantially improving upon
ground based observations.
While the brightness variations may be due to surface features like craters
and basins they are more likely caused by regions of nitrogen
and methane frost.
The frost regions should show "seasonal" changes which can be
tracked in future Hubble observations.
Authors & editors:
Robert
Nemiroff
(MTU)
& Jerry Bonnell (USRA)
NASA Technical Rep.:
Jay Norris.
Specific rights apply.
A service of:
LHEA at
NASA/
GSFC
&
Michigan Tech. U.