Plutos widespread water ice
California, Jan 29 (Just Earth News/IBNS): New data from NASAs New Horizons spacecraft point to more prevalent water ice on Plutos surface than previously thought.
"This false-color image, derived from observations in infrared light by the Ralph/Linear Etalon Imaging Spectral Array (LEISA) instrument, shows where the spectral features of water ice are abundant on Pluto’s surface. It is based on two LEISA scans of Pluto obtained on July 14, 2015, from a range of about 67,000 miles (108,000 kilometers)," read the NASA website.
The scans, taken about 15 minutes apart, were stitched into a combined multispectral Pluto “data cube” covering the full hemisphere visible to New Horizons as it flew past Pluto.
A data cube like this is a three-dimensional array in which an image of Pluto is formed at each LEISA-sensitive wavelength.
Water ice is Pluto's crustal "bedrock,” the canvas on which its more volatile ices paint their seasonally changing patterns. Initial New Horizons maps of Pluto's water ice bedrock compared LEISA spectra with a pure water ice template spectrum, resulting in the map at left.
A disadvantage of that technique is that water ice's spectral signature is easily masked by methane ice, so that map was only sensitive to areas that were especially rich in water ice and/or depleted in methane.
The much more sensitive method used on the right involves modeling the contributions of Pluto's various ices all together. This method, too, has limitations in that it can only map ices included in the model, but the team is continually adding more data and improving the model.
The new map shows exposed water ice to be considerably more widespread across Pluto's surface than was previously known — an important discovery.
But despite its much greater sensitivity, the map still shows little or no water ice in the informally named places called Sputnik Planum (the left or western region of Pluto’s “heart”) and Lowell Regio (far north on the encounter hemisphere). This indicates that at least in these regions, Pluto's icy bedrock is well hidden beneath a thick blanket of other ices such as methane, nitrogen and carbon monoxide.
Image credits: NASA/JHUIAPL/SwRI
Top Headlines
-
News
Bangladesh MP warns of refugee crisis if BJP wins West Bengal polls
May 01, 2026
-
News
Rain, protests, and slogans: TMC-BJP faceoff erupts outside Kolkata's Netaji Indoor Stadium strong room
April 30, 2026
-
News
Bengal polls: Mamata rejects exit poll projections, claims decisive TMC return to power
April 30, 2026
-
News
Operation Sindoor proved terror epicentres are not immune: Rajnath Singh at SCO meet
April 28, 2026
-
News
India, New Zealand seal historic FTA; Piyush Goyal calls it a defining milestone
April 27, 2026
-
News
Engine fire forces SWISS flight to abort in Delhi, 6 injured
April 26, 2026
-
News
Vee Technologies engineering division delivers 3,000th fire truck design for the US
April 24, 2026
-
News
'CM can't put democracy in peril by interfering with probe': SC slams Mamata Banerjee in I-PAC raid case
April 22, 2026
-
News
'India will never bow to any form of terror': PM Modi on Pahalgam terror attack anniversary
April 22, 2026
-
News
'Lots of bombs if talks fail': Trumps warning as Iran ceasefire nears end
April 20, 2026




