Unlike how scientists believe Earth's moon formedbillions of years ago,Drama Archives Plutoand its biggest moon, Charon, didn't have a messy breakup.
New computer simulations show the primitive dwarf planetand the object that struck it likely had an unforeseen kind of cosmic collision. Scientists usually classify planetary crashes as either hit-and-runs or graze-and-merges: One planet or rock swipes another and then keeps on trucking, or a thing smacks into another thing, and they mix together as one.
But what a NASApostdoctoral fellow at the Southwestern Research Institute found was something quite different — a so-called "kiss-and-capture" scenario.
When Pluto and Charon hit, they may have stuck together, rotating through spaceas one unit until they pushed against each other, according to a new study, sending the moon into a stable orbit. Neither would have lost too much of its original material in the process.
The incident could have created enough heat for Pluto to form an underground ocean, Adeene Denton, the lead researcher, told Mashable. It's an intriguing implication, supporting existing predictions that Pluto is hiding water under its icy shell. These findings were publishedin the journal Nature Geoscience.
Since New Horizons'close encounter with Pluto 10 years ago, experts have come to think of the dwarf planet as much more scientifically valuable. Rather than a cold, featureless ball on the fringes of the solar system, the spacecraft images revealed a geologically diverse world, with mountains, ice sheets, pits, cliffs, cracks, and valleys.
Charon, its biggest of five moons, was discovered in 1978 by the U.S. Naval Observatory. At about 750 miles wide, it's half the size of Pluto — extremely large for a moon.
In previous models, Charon formed in a similar fashion to Earth's moon: The theory goes that a Mars-sized planet whacked a primitive version of Earth like a paint ball, casting off a mixture of planetary guts. Rather than forming a disk of shattered debris, though, it morphed into two fluid blobs that yo-yoed material between them. The gravity of Earth eventually hurled the smaller blob onward, becoming Earth's sole stable moon.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
But computer simulation advancements allowed Denton's team to include the structural strength of rock and ice, the primary materials of Pluto and other stuff in the Kuiper Belt, a disk beyond Neptuneof cometsand tiny ice worlds. That made all the difference, Denton said. The simulation showed that Pluto and its impactor didn't merge, lose a lot of material to the solar system, or become fluid blobs.
Researchers now wonder if other objects in this brutally cold region have had kiss-and-capture collisions, too, based on the large sizes of orbiting moons and moonlets out there compared to other parts of the solar system. Given that kiss-and-captures could provide a way to add extra heat into the equation, that might also mean other distant objects have developed underground oceans over eons.
"Eight out of 10 of the largest [Kuiper Belt objects] have a large mass fraction satellite like Charon," Denton said in an email. "This process might have operated all over the outer solar system early in its history."
Topics NASA
Joseph Fiennes: 'This Handmaid's Tale' scene would've gone too farTaylor Swift and Tom Hiddleston are KDisney is banning singleYou can now watch British TV's first lesbian kiss for the first time in 40 yearsNew Yellowstone supervolcano study stirs debate about its deep pastThis might be the most unique 'Bohemian Rhapsody' cover everKid Cudi calls for LGTBQ support in hip hop following Orlando shootingDisney is banning singleDog wearing a cone is having a real hard time playing ballChina invites reporter to take sledgehammer to its longest glass bridge to prove it's safeViolent California Carr Fire leaps river, enters ReddingSenate introduces $95 million bill to study tech's effects on kidsThis is probably what Apple's upcoming iPhones will look likeThis is probably what Apple's upcoming iPhones will look like'Love Island' feels different now and it's because of #MeToo2 'Doctor Who' actors hugged IRL and fans were like woahTwitter promises to suspend troll accounts on Periscope more often'NBA Live 19' allows you to create female players for the first time'NBA Live 19' allows you to create female players for the first timeThis might be the most unique 'Bohemian Rhapsody' cover ever Brienne of Tarth writing about Jaime Lannister's legacy gets the meme treatment Melt over these newly released Prince Harry and Meghan wedding photos The 10 best Disney+ dramas to stir your emotions WhatsApp beta lets you use the same account on multiple phones ‘Batman: The Animated Series’: Where to stream Kevin Conroy’s iconic take Wordle today: Here's the answer, hints for November 14 Watch these brave humans risk everything to chase cheese down a hill What Jake and Logan Paul's new gossip channel says about the state of YouTube Jake Paul's attempt at calling out 'cyberbully' Cody Ko backfired beautifully 'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for November 12 Microsoft debuts an 'ugly' Clippy sweater in time for the holidays 25 tweets about glasses to read while your glasses slide down your nose Ben Carson mixed up the real estate term 'REO' with Oreo cookies Elizabeth Warren worked other jobs while teaching. Get over it. Apple's Emergency SOS feature is coming to iPhone 14s this month Wordle today: Here's the answer, hints for November 11 Elon Musk's $8 Twitter Blue subscription goes live, will tell you who paid for verification Mama duck parades her babies through hospital, delighting everyone Cool guy Mayor Bill de Blasio confesses his love for ska 'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for November 15
2.0385s , 10134.59375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Drama Archives】,Wisdom Convergence Information Network