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At the
edge
Pluto is a tiny world that lies 3664 million miles from the Sun. Its orbit of
our star takes 248 earth years, so it has not yet made one complete orbit since
it was discovered in 1930. Only one fifth the diameter of Earth, this dwarf
planet spins on its axis every 6.4 earth days. It has a highly tilted axis of
123 degrees, which causes its north pole to appear almost upside down compared
to Earth. Pluto has a highly elliptical orbit, hence for short periods it’s
path takes it closer to the Sun than Neptune, and this orbit is again tilted at
17 degrees to that of the Earth, so it ‘strays’ further from the Solar
System Plane (the Ecliptic) than the planets. NASA’s New Horizons probe was
launched in January 2006 to visit Pluto, whose structure is as yet unknown, for
arrival July 2015. From observations using optical and radio telescopes, and
also radar, it is believed to have a rocky core covered in ice. With a surface
of frozen methane, some of which evaporates to form a thin, short lived,
atmosphere for a few years when the planet is closest to the Sun, as it warms up
Pluto’s average surface temperature is minus 223oC.
Pluto’s moon, Charon, with more than half the diameter of Pluto itself, makes
it the largest moon, in relation to its parent. Discovered in 1978, it orbits
Pluto every 6.4 days, and as this is the same as Pluto’s spin rate, both
bodies always present the same face to each other, in a synchronised orbit. This
means from one hemisphere of Pluto, it is always invisible, - there would never
be a moonrise, whereas from the opposite hemisphere, it’s always visible and
remains motionless, 11400 miles above the surface. An observer on each object
looking at each other would also never see the far side of either body. Charon
is believed to have a surface of water ice at minus 220oC, making this ice as
hard as stone. Two smaller moons were discovered in late 2005.
Observing Pluto is difficult. The image below shows the best that ground based
telescopes can show of Pluto and even in the Hubble Space Telescope image
alongside, both still appear as star-like objects! The easiest way to identify
Pluto is by studying its motion against the background stars over a period of
weeks, or from photographs, a similar technique used for its discovery. Over the
next four years, Pluto’s path takes it across the star rich summer
constellation of Sagittarius, making amateur observations virtually impossible.
Though not known by the ancient Greeks, Pluto represents their god of the
Underworld, and from its dark and distant domain at the edge of our Solar
System, the name is indeed most appropriate.
Visit www.shannonsideastronomy.com
or call Conn on 061-301493

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