Physical state and distribution of materials at the surface of Pluto from New Horizons LEISA imaging spectrometer

© 2016 From Earth based observations Pluto is known to be the host of N2, CH4 and CO ices and also a dark red material. Very limited spatial distribution information is available from rotational visible and near-infrared spectral curves obtained from hemispheric measurements. In July 2015 the New Ho...

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Main Authors: Schmitt, B, Philippe, S, Grundy, WM, Reuter, DC, Côte, R, Quirico, E, Protopapa, S, Young, LA, Binzel, RP, Cook, JC, Cruikshank, DP, Dalle Ore, CM, Earle, AM, Ennico, K, Howett, CJA, Jennings, DE, Linscott, IR, Lunsford, AW, Olkin, CB, Parker, AH, Parker, JWm, Singer, KN, Spencer, JR, Stansberry, JA, Stern, SA, Tsang, CCC, Verbiscer, AJ, Weaver, HA
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier BV 2021
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/134477
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author Schmitt, B
Philippe, S
Grundy, WM
Reuter, DC
Côte, R
Quirico, E
Protopapa, S
Young, LA
Binzel, RP
Cook, JC
Cruikshank, DP
Dalle Ore, CM
Earle, AM
Ennico, K
Howett, CJA
Jennings, DE
Linscott, IR
Lunsford, AW
Olkin, CB
Parker, AH
Parker, JWm
Singer, KN
Spencer, JR
Stansberry, JA
Stern, SA
Tsang, CCC
Verbiscer, AJ
Weaver, HA
author2 Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences
author_facet Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences
Schmitt, B
Philippe, S
Grundy, WM
Reuter, DC
Côte, R
Quirico, E
Protopapa, S
Young, LA
Binzel, RP
Cook, JC
Cruikshank, DP
Dalle Ore, CM
Earle, AM
Ennico, K
Howett, CJA
Jennings, DE
Linscott, IR
Lunsford, AW
Olkin, CB
Parker, AH
Parker, JWm
Singer, KN
Spencer, JR
Stansberry, JA
Stern, SA
Tsang, CCC
Verbiscer, AJ
Weaver, HA
author_sort Schmitt, B
collection MIT
description © 2016 From Earth based observations Pluto is known to be the host of N2, CH4 and CO ices and also a dark red material. Very limited spatial distribution information is available from rotational visible and near-infrared spectral curves obtained from hemispheric measurements. In July 2015 the New Horizons spacecraft reached Pluto and its satellite system and recorded a large set of data. The LEISA spectro-imager of the RALPH instruments are dedicated to the study of the composition and physical state of the materials composing the surface. In this paper we report a study of the distribution and physical state of the ices and non-ice materials on Pluto's illuminated surface and their mode and degree of mixing. Principal Component analysis as well as various specific spectral indicators and correlation plots are used on the first set of 2 high resolution spectro-images from the LEISA instrument covering the whole illuminated face of Pluto at the time of the New Horizons encounter. Qualitative distribution maps have been obtained for the 4 main condensed molecules, N2, CH4, CO, H2O as well as for the visible-dark red material. Based on specific spectral indicators, using either the strength or the position of absorption bands, these 4 molecules are found to indicate the presence of 3 different types of ices: N2-rich:CH4:CO ices, CH4-rich(:CO:N2?) ices and H2O ice. The mixing lines between these ices and with the dark red material are studied using scatter plots between the various spectral indicators. CH4 is mixed at the molecular level with N2, most probably also with CO, thus forming a ternary molecular mixture that follows its phase diagram with low solubility limits. The occurrence of a N2-rich – CH4-rich ices mixing line associated with a progressive decrease of the CO/CH4 ratio tells us that a fractionation sublimation sequence transforms one type of ice to the other forming either a N2-rich – CH4-rich binary mixture at the surface or an upper CH4-rich ice crust that may hide the N2-rich ice below. The strong CH4-rich – H2O mixing line witnesses the subsequent sublimation of the CH4-rich ice lag left behind by the N2:CO sublimation (N spring-summer), or a direct condensation of CH4 ice on the cold H2O ice (S autumn). The weak mixing line between CH4-containing ices and the dark red material and the very sharp spatial transitions between these ices and this non-volatile material are probably due to thermal incompatibility. Finally the occurrence of a H2O ice – red material mixing line advocates for a spatial mixing of the red material covering H2O ice, with possibly a small amount intimately mixed in water ice. From this analysis of the different materials distribution and their relative mixing lines, H2O ice appears to be the substratum on which other ices condense or non-volatile organic material is deposited from the atmosphere. N2-rich ices seem to evolve to CH4-dominated ices, possibly still containing traces of CO and N2, as N2 and CO sublimate away. The spatial distribution of these materials is very complex. The high spatial definition of all these composition maps, as well as those at even higher resolution that will be soon available, will allow us to compare them with Pluto's geologic features observed by LORRI panchromatic and MVIC multispectral imagers to better understand the geophysical processes in action at the surface of this astonishingly active frozen world.
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spelling mit-1721.1/1344772024-01-02T19:39:16Z Physical state and distribution of materials at the surface of Pluto from New Horizons LEISA imaging spectrometer Schmitt, B Philippe, S Grundy, WM Reuter, DC Côte, R Quirico, E Protopapa, S Young, LA Binzel, RP Cook, JC Cruikshank, DP Dalle Ore, CM Earle, AM Ennico, K Howett, CJA Jennings, DE Linscott, IR Lunsford, AW Olkin, CB Parker, AH Parker, JWm Singer, KN Spencer, JR Stansberry, JA Stern, SA Tsang, CCC Verbiscer, AJ Weaver, HA Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences © 2016 From Earth based observations Pluto is known to be the host of N2, CH4 and CO ices and also a dark red material. Very limited spatial distribution information is available from rotational visible and near-infrared spectral curves obtained from hemispheric measurements. In July 2015 the New Horizons spacecraft reached Pluto and its satellite system and recorded a large set of data. The LEISA spectro-imager of the RALPH instruments are dedicated to the study of the composition and physical state of the materials composing the surface. In this paper we report a study of the distribution and physical state of the ices and non-ice materials on Pluto's illuminated surface and their mode and degree of mixing. Principal Component analysis as well as various specific spectral indicators and correlation plots are used on the first set of 2 high resolution spectro-images from the LEISA instrument covering the whole illuminated face of Pluto at the time of the New Horizons encounter. Qualitative distribution maps have been obtained for the 4 main condensed molecules, N2, CH4, CO, H2O as well as for the visible-dark red material. Based on specific spectral indicators, using either the strength or the position of absorption bands, these 4 molecules are found to indicate the presence of 3 different types of ices: N2-rich:CH4:CO ices, CH4-rich(:CO:N2?) ices and H2O ice. The mixing lines between these ices and with the dark red material are studied using scatter plots between the various spectral indicators. CH4 is mixed at the molecular level with N2, most probably also with CO, thus forming a ternary molecular mixture that follows its phase diagram with low solubility limits. The occurrence of a N2-rich – CH4-rich ices mixing line associated with a progressive decrease of the CO/CH4 ratio tells us that a fractionation sublimation sequence transforms one type of ice to the other forming either a N2-rich – CH4-rich binary mixture at the surface or an upper CH4-rich ice crust that may hide the N2-rich ice below. The strong CH4-rich – H2O mixing line witnesses the subsequent sublimation of the CH4-rich ice lag left behind by the N2:CO sublimation (N spring-summer), or a direct condensation of CH4 ice on the cold H2O ice (S autumn). The weak mixing line between CH4-containing ices and the dark red material and the very sharp spatial transitions between these ices and this non-volatile material are probably due to thermal incompatibility. Finally the occurrence of a H2O ice – red material mixing line advocates for a spatial mixing of the red material covering H2O ice, with possibly a small amount intimately mixed in water ice. From this analysis of the different materials distribution and their relative mixing lines, H2O ice appears to be the substratum on which other ices condense or non-volatile organic material is deposited from the atmosphere. N2-rich ices seem to evolve to CH4-dominated ices, possibly still containing traces of CO and N2, as N2 and CO sublimate away. The spatial distribution of these materials is very complex. The high spatial definition of all these composition maps, as well as those at even higher resolution that will be soon available, will allow us to compare them with Pluto's geologic features observed by LORRI panchromatic and MVIC multispectral imagers to better understand the geophysical processes in action at the surface of this astonishingly active frozen world. 2021-10-27T20:05:10Z 2021-10-27T20:05:10Z 2017 2019-09-26T13:04:29Z Article http://purl.org/eprint/type/JournalArticle https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/134477 Schmitt, B., et al. "Physical State and Distribution of Materials at the Surface of Pluto from New Horizons Leisa Imaging Spectrometer." Icarus 287 (2017): 229-60. en 10.1016/J.ICARUS.2016.12.025 Icarus Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ application/pdf Elsevier BV Other repository
spellingShingle Schmitt, B
Philippe, S
Grundy, WM
Reuter, DC
Côte, R
Quirico, E
Protopapa, S
Young, LA
Binzel, RP
Cook, JC
Cruikshank, DP
Dalle Ore, CM
Earle, AM
Ennico, K
Howett, CJA
Jennings, DE
Linscott, IR
Lunsford, AW
Olkin, CB
Parker, AH
Parker, JWm
Singer, KN
Spencer, JR
Stansberry, JA
Stern, SA
Tsang, CCC
Verbiscer, AJ
Weaver, HA
Physical state and distribution of materials at the surface of Pluto from New Horizons LEISA imaging spectrometer
title Physical state and distribution of materials at the surface of Pluto from New Horizons LEISA imaging spectrometer
title_full Physical state and distribution of materials at the surface of Pluto from New Horizons LEISA imaging spectrometer
title_fullStr Physical state and distribution of materials at the surface of Pluto from New Horizons LEISA imaging spectrometer
title_full_unstemmed Physical state and distribution of materials at the surface of Pluto from New Horizons LEISA imaging spectrometer
title_short Physical state and distribution of materials at the surface of Pluto from New Horizons LEISA imaging spectrometer
title_sort physical state and distribution of materials at the surface of pluto from new horizons leisa imaging spectrometer
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/134477
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