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The Dark Side of PlutoDuring its departure from Pluto, New Horizons used its LORRI camera to image a portion of Pluto's southern hemisphere that was in a decades-long seasonal winter darkness, but still very faintly illuminated by sunlight reflected by Charon. Recovery of this faint signal was technically challenging. The bright ring of sunlight forward-scattered by haze in the Plutonian atmosphere encircling the nightside hemisphere was severely overexposed, defeating the standard smeared-charge removal required for LORRI images. Reconstruction of the overexposed portions of the raw images, however, allowed adequate corrections to be accomplished. The small solar elongation of Pluto during the departure phase also generated a complex scattered-sunlight background in the images that was three orders of magnitude stronger than the estimated Charon-light flux (the Charon-light flux is similar to the flux of moonlight on Earth a few days before first quarter). A model background image was constructed for each Pluto image based on principal component analysis applied to an ensemble of scattered-sunlight images taken at identical Sun−spacecraft geometry to the Pluto images. The recovered Charon-light image revealed a high-albedo region in the southern hemisphere. We argue that this may be a regional deposit of N2 or CH4 ice. The Charon-light image also shows that the south polar region currently has markedly lower albedo than the north polar region of Pluto, which may reflect the sublimation of N2 ice or the deposition of haze particulates during the recent southern summer.
Document ID
20210023503
Acquisition Source
Ames Research Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Tod R. Lauer ORCID
(National Optical Astronomy Observatory Tucson, Arizona, United States)
John R. Spencer ORCID
(Southwest Research Institute San Antonio, Texas, United States)
Tanguy Bertrand ORCID
(Laboratory of Space Studies and Instrumentation in Astrophysics Meudon, France)
Ross A Beyer ORCID
(SETI Institute Mountain View, California, United States)
Kirby D. Runyon ORCID
(Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory North Laurel, Maryland, United States)
Oliver L White ORCID
(SETI Institute Mountain View, California, United States)
Leslie A. Young ORCID
(Southwest Research Institute San Antonio, Texas, United States)
Kimberly Ennico
(Ames Research Center Mountain View, California, United States)
William B McKinnon ORCID
(Washington University in St. Louis St Louis, Missouri, United States)
Jeffrey M Moore
(Ames Research Center Mountain View, California, United States)
Catherine B. Olkin ORCID
(Southwest Research Institute San Antonio, Texas, United States)
S Alan Stern ORCID
(Southwest Research Institute Boulder, CO, United States)
Harold A Weaver ORCID
(Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory North Laurel, Maryland, United States)
Date Acquired
October 27, 2021
Publication Date
October 20, 2021
Publication Information
Publication: The Planetary Science Journal
Publisher: IOP Publishing
Volume: 2
Issue: 5
e-ISSN: 2632-3338
URL: https://iopscience.iop.org/journal/2632-3338
Subject Category
Astrophysics
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 750769.06.03.04
CONTRACT_GRANT: SPEC5732
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNX17AC46A
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNX17AC46A
CONTRACT_GRANT: NASW-02008
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNM16AA08C
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Portions of document may include copyright protected material.
Technical Review
Single Expert
Keywords
Pluto
Planetary Surfaces
New Horizons
LORRI camera
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