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OUTER PLANETS
Charon at 40: four decades of discovery on Pluto's largest moon
by Staff Writers
Washington DC (SPX) Jun 25, 2018

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The largest of Pluto's five moons, Charon, was discovered 40 years ago today by James Christy and Robert Harrington at the U.S. Naval Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona - only about six miles from where Pluto itself was discovered at Lowell Observatory. They weren't even looking for satellites of Pluto - Christy was trying to refine Pluto's orbit around the Sun.

Before NASA's New Horizons spacecraft flew through the Pluto system in July 2015, many New Horizons scientists expected Charon to be a monotonous, crater-battered world. Instead, they found a landscape covered with giant mountains, vast canyons, a strange polar cap, surface-color variations and landslides.

"Even if Pluto wasn't there, Charon would have been a great flyby target by itself," said Will Grundy, a New Horizons science team co-investigator from Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona. "It's a far more exciting world than we imagined."

It would have taken serious imagination to see much of anything in the grainy telescope plates of Pluto that U.S. Naval Observatory astronomer James Christy was checking 40 years ago to refine Pluto's orbit. But on June 22, 1978, Christy did notice something - a small bump on one side of Pluto.

As he looked at other images he saw the bump again and again, only this time moving from one side of Pluto to another. Further examination showed the bump seemed to move around Pluto, cycling back and forth over Pluto's own rotation period - 6.39 days. He figured either Pluto possessed a mountain thousands of miles high, or it had a satellite in a synchronous orbit. In the 48 years that had passed since Clyde Tombaugh discovered Pluto at Lowell Observatory in 1930, no evidence of any moon of Pluto had ever been spotted.

The Naval Observatory detailed the next steps to confirm the possible moon in a 1998 story about the 20th anniversary of the discovery: Christy scoured the observatory's image archives and found more cases where Pluto appeared strangely elongated. He measured the angle (from north) where the elongations appeared, while his colleague Robert Harrington calculated what the answer "should be" if the elongation was caused by an orbiting satellite.

Their calculations matched. But to be sure, they waited for the Naval Observatory's 61-inch telescope to make one more confirmation. And on July 2, 1978, new images showed the elongation due to a satellite right where it was supposed to be. They announced their discovery to the world five days later.

An Important Discovery
The discovery of Charon fueled Pluto's evolution from a telescopic dot into an actual planetary system - and a source of many discoveries yet to come.

About the size of Texas, Charon is the largest moon in the solar system relative to its parent planet. Together, Pluto and Charon were the first known double planet - or binary - two bodies that orbit a common center of gravity. Modeling also shows that Pluto-Charon formed by giant impact, very much like the Earth-Moon system.

Charon's size and proximity to Pluto helped the push to send a mission to Pluto and see, close up, something for the first time. "The importance of the discovery of Charon really cannot be underestimated," said Alan Stern, New Horizons principal investigator from the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado. "We on the New Horizons team owe a big debt of gratitude to Jim Christy for his landmark discovery."

In passing just about 18,000 miles (29,000 kilometers) from Charon on July 14, 2015, New Horizons completely transformed our view of the moon. High-resolution images of Charon's Pluto-facing hemisphere revealed a belt of fractures and canyons that stretches more than 1,000 miles (1,600 kilometers) across the entire face of Charon and, likely, onto the moon's far side. Four times as long as the Grand Canyon, and twice as deep in places, these faults and canyons indicate a titanic geological upheaval in Charon's past.

"That huge tectonic belt tells us Charon likely had an ocean under its surface, and as the ocean froze, the ice would expand and crack the surface," said Cathy Olkin, a New Horizons deputy project scientist from Southwest Research Institute in Boulder. "That's an important finding, especially in light of the increasing scientific interest in ocean worlds across the solar system."

An especially cool feature is Charon's reddish polar coloring. Methane gas escapes from Pluto's atmosphere and becomes "trapped" by the moon's gravity and freezes to the cold, icy surface at Charon's pole. Chemical processing by ultraviolet light from the Sun then transforms the methane into heavier hydrocarbons and eventually into reddish organic materials called tholins.

"Who would have thought that Pluto is a graffiti artist, spray-painting its companion with a reddish stain that covers an area the size of New Mexico?" asked Grundy, lead author of a 2016 paper on the phenomenon in the journal Nature.

For Christy - who, with Charlene, was recognized by a packed auditorium at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Lab in Maryland when the first close-up images of Charon were revealed - the transformation of Charon from a grainy blob into a real world over the past 40 years has been nothing short of amazing.

"When you go from this little blur in which you don't actually see anything, to the enormous detail New Horizons sent back," Christy said, "it's incredible."


Related Links
New Horizons at NASA
The million outer planets of a star called Sol


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OUTER PLANETS
NASA shares more Pluto images from New Horizons
Boulder, Colo. (UPI) Sep 11, 2018
After a few weeks of silence, the Pluto photo parade is back in action. On Friday, NASA released a new roll of images beamed back by the intrepid probe, New Horizons. The new images include additional close-ups of Pluto's rugged beauty - the sphere's surface features revealed in new range and detail. "Pluto is showing us a diversity of landforms and complexity of processes that rival anything we've seen in the solar system," Alan Stern, a researcher at the Southwest Research Institute a ... read more

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