THE SURFACE OF PLUTO
The never-before-seen surface
of the distant planet Pluto is resolved in these NASA Hubble
Space Telescope pictures, taken with the European Space Agency's
(ESA) Faint Object Camera (FOC) aboard Hubble.
Discovered in 1930, Pluto has always appeared as nothing more
than a dot of light in even the largest earth-based telescopes
because Pluto's disk is much smaller than can be resolved from
beneath the Earth's turbulent atmosphere. Pluto is 2/3 the size
of Earth's Moon but 1,200 times farther away. Viewing surface
detail is as difficult as trying to read the printing on a golf
ball located thirty-three miles away!
Hubble imaged nearly the entire surface of Pluto, as it rotated
through its 6.4-day period, in late June and early July 1994.
These images, which were made in blue light, show that Pluto is
an unusually complex object, with more large-scale contrast than
any planet, except Earth
Pluto itself probably shows even more contrast and perhaps
sharper boundaries between light and dark areas than is shown
here, but Hubble's resolution (just like early telescopic views
of Mars) tends to blur edges and blend together small features
sitting inside larger ones.
The two smaller inset pictures at the top are actual images from
Hubble. North is up. Each square pixel (picture element) is more
than 100 miles across. At this resolution, Hubble discerns
roughly 12 major "regions" where the surface is either
bright or dark.
The larger images (bottom) are from a global map constructed
through computer image processing performed on the Hubble data.
The tile pattern is an artifact of the image enhancement
technique.
Opposite hemispheres of Pluto are seen in these two views. Some
of the variations across Pluto's surface may be caused by
topographic features such as basins, or fresh impact craters.
However, most of the surface features unveiled by Hubble,
including the prominent northern polar cap, are likely produced
by the complex distribution of frosts that migrate across Pluto's
surface with its orbital and seasonal cycles and chemical
byproducts deposited out of Pluto's nitrogen-methane atmosphere.
The picture was taken in blue light when Pluto was at a distance
of 3 billion miles from Earth.
Credit: Alan
Stern (Southwest Research Institute), Marc Buie
(Lowell Observatory), NASA and ESA
EMBARGOED UNTIL:
2:00 P.M. (EST) March 7, 1996
Photo No.: STScI-PRC96-09a (or pluto4)