Planetary Close-up Reveals Pluto 'Snakeskin'
Ridges cover a mountain range known informally as Tartarus Dorsa.
“What is ?” planetary scientist Barbara Cohen gasped, marvelling at the latest images of Pluto released on September 24.
Cohen, of NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, is not alone. It is a question nearly every planetary specialist is asking with each release of pictures from NASA's New Horizons spacecraft, which . The latest images—the most-detailed colour shots yet downlinked to Earth—show a bizarre 'snakeskin' terrain, wrinkled with ridges and smudged with rust-coloured material.
So far, Pluto has turned out to be strikingly active for an icy world 5 billion kilometres from the Sun. , which are held up by the sheer rigidity of ice frozen at about −235 °C, 38 degrees above absolute zero.
Next month, New Horizons will burn its engines in a series of manoeuvres to set it on course to fly past a in 2019.
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