Nasa discovers blue sky and red ice on Pluto

Published October 9, 2015
This image released by NASA on October 8, 2015, shows Pluto’s haze layer and its blue colour. ─ AFP
This image released by NASA on October 8, 2015, shows Pluto’s haze layer and its blue colour. ─ AFP
This image released by NASA on Thursday, Oct. 8, 2015, shows regions with exposed water ice highlighted in blue. ─ AP
This image released by NASA on Thursday, Oct. 8, 2015, shows regions with exposed water ice highlighted in blue. ─ AP

CAPE CANAVERAL: The sky over Pluto may not be sunny but it’s undoubtedly blue.

Nasa’s New Horizons spacecraft discovered Pluto’s blue sky during the historic flyby of the icy dwarf planet in July. The images of Pluto’s atmospheric haze were beamed down last week and released by Nasa on Thursday.

The particles in the atmospheric haze are actually red and gray, according to scientists. But the way the particles scatter blue light is what has everyone excited about the dwarf planet orbiting on the far fringes of our solar system, a twilight zone known more formally as the Kuiper Belt.

“Who would have expected a blue sky in the Kuiper Belt? It’s gorgeous,” Alan Stern, the principal scientist for New Horizons, said in a Nasa release about the latest images.

The blue tint can help scientists understand the size and makeup of the haze particles surrounding Pluto, where twilight constantly reigns given the 3.6 billion-mile distance between it and the sun.

Pluto’s high-altitude haze seems to be comparable to that of Saturn’s moon, Titan, according to Nasa, and the result of interaction between molecules.

Published in Dawn October 9th, 2015

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