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发表于 2006-3-4 21:06:52
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part-问答部分
Frequently Asked Questions
TOP 10
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Is Pluto a planet?
There is no firm definition of a planet. The debate about whether Pluto is a planet was generated by recent detections of hundreds of planetary objects in the outer solar system. Officially, the International Astronomical Union classifies Pluto as a planet. Most people call Pluto a planet because it orbits the Sun and it is large enough that its own gravity has pulled it into a spherical shape. Click here for more discussion on this issue.
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Does Pluto have a moon?
Yes. Pluto's moon, named Charon, is half the size of Pluto. Side by side Pluto and Charon would fit across the diameter of our Moon. It is possible that Pluto has more, smaller moons that we have not yet detected. Click here for more information on Charon.
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How cold is it on Pluto?
Very, very cold. The temperature on Pluto is minus 387 degrees Fahrenheit (which is minus 233 degrees Celsius or 40 Kelvin).
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Could there be life on Pluto?
The surface of Pluto is extremely cold, roughly 40 degrees above absolute zero (minus 387 Fahrenheit or minus 233 Celsius), so it seems unlikely that life could exist there. At such cold temperatures, water, which is vital for life as we know it, is essentially rock-like. Pluto's interior is warmer, however, and some think there could even be an ocean deep inside.
Visit the Science section for more discussion on the possibility of life on Pluto.
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Does Pluto have an atmosphere?
Yes, though Pluto's atmosphere is not very thick. The pressure at the surface of Pluto is about 3 to 100 microbars or 3 to 100 millionths of the surface pressure of the Earth's atmosphere. The main constituent is molecular nitrogen, (N 2) the same as on Earth. Molecules of methane and carbon monoxide have also been detected at Pluto. But no oxygen has been detected at Pluto yet.
Click here for further discussion on Pluto's atmosphere.
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What would a human see on Pluto?
A typical scene on Pluto would probably be an icy, frosty, dimly lit landscape. It might be similar to a view on Earth in the winter in the arctic, lit by a full moon. Go here for further discussion of views from Pluto.
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Why send a mission to Pluto?
Pluto is the only planet in our solar system, unexplored by space probes. A mission to Pluto-Charon and the Kuiper Belt will explore the mysterious, icy worlds at the edge of our solar system and tell us about the origin and evolution of our planetary neighbors.
Check out the science overview section for more on New Horizons' mission objectives.
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How long does it take to get to Pluto?
Traveling to Pluto using the minimum amount of fuel would take longer than 30 years. NASA's Voyager mission demonstrated the advantages of using the gravity of the giant planets, particularly Jupiter, to "boost" a spacecraft and reduce travel times to the outer solar system. If New Horizons is launched in January 2006 and uses a flyby of Jupiter in spring 2007, it should arrive at Pluto in 2015. The shortest journey would take 9½ years.
Click here to see the New Horizons mission timeline.
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Why not go into orbit around Pluto?
Pluto's gravity is weak so that it takes a large amount of fuel to go into orbit around the planet- and with New Horizons expected to zip past Pluto at nearly 14 kilometers per second (more than 30,000 miles per hour), there is no practical way to store the tremendous amount of fuel the spacecraft would need to slow down enough to begin an orbit mission. A flyby mission provides many images and other kinds of information about Pluto and Charon, as well as an opportunity to fly on to another Kuiper Belt Object.
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How much does a mission to Pluto cost?
The cost of the mission, including the launch vehicle and operations through the Pluto-Charon encounter, will be roughly $650 million. Divided among the population of the United States (according to the U.S. Census clock at http://www.census.gov/main/www/popclock.html) over the 10-year duration of the mission, this comes out to about 20 cents per person, per year.
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FUN FACTS
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Is there enough light to read a book on Pluto?
Yes. During daylight on Pluto, the Sun would be almost 300 times as bright as the full Moon on Earth (1/900 times dimmer than full daylight on Earth).
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What does the Sun or Earth look like from Pluto?
The Sun would still be the brightest object in the sky, by far. Although a mere fraction of the brightness of sunlight on Earth, the Sun seen from Pluto would still be about 20 million times brighter than the brightest star.
Pluto is 14th magnitude as seen from Earth - meaning it's hundreds of times fainter than the naked eye can see. Earth has 36 times the surface area, 1,000 times the illumination and a similar reflectivity as Pluto, so, Earth should be about 3rd magnitude (as bright as an easily visible star) as seen from Pluto. The biggest problem with seeing Earth from Pluto is that it would be located close to the Sun, but it might be briefly visible to the naked eye when Charon eclipses the Sun.
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What would you weigh on Pluto or Charon?
Just below 7% of your Earthly weight on Pluto, and just over 3% of your terrestrial weight on Charon. To be a little more accurate, every 100 pounds of weight on your bathroom scale on Earth would weigh just 6.7 pounds on Pluto and 3.4 pounds on Charon.
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Does a human have enough energy to jump into orbit around Pluto?
No. To escape Charon's gravity you need to get up a lot of speed. The escape velocity from Charon is near 1,351 miles per hour (610 meters per second). Not even the fastest runner or the strongest person could reach those speeds on Charon.
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Would I be able to ski on Pluto?
Yes, in a fashion. Let's look at some of the key questions . . .
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Are there any good hills on Pluto?
We're not sure, but there are bound to be at least a few craters with slopes that are hundreds of meters high. Neptune 's satellite Triton is about Pluto's size and in roughly the same region of the solar system, and the Voyager spacecraft found hundreds of craters on Triton.
On Earth, a skier heading straight down a 30-degree slope will accelerate to 11 miles per hour in one second if his wax is really good and he's got a good tuck. Gravity on Pluto is about 15 times less than on the Earth, so the same skier on Pluto would "tear" down the same hill at 0.7 mph after one second.
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How are the snow conditions on Pluto?
Pluto's surface is mainly covered with nitrogen ice at about minus 387 Fahrenheit (or minus 233 Celsius). It's not known whether solid nitrogen ice is as slippery as water ice, but a skier/boarder on Pluto may want to take advantage of another property of nitrogen ice - its vapor pressure.
All ices are slowly sublimating, which means that some of their surface molecules escape into the atmosphere. You've seen puddles of water evaporate on a sunny day, and sublimation is the same, except the molecules jump directly from the solid ice to the atmosphere. Carbon dioxide ice (dry ice) sublimates when you have a chunk of it in a room, for example.
The sublimation rate increases rapidly when the ice temperature gets little warmer. This is very important on Pluto, where the entire atmosphere depends on the average temperature of the nitrogen ice. A small increase in the nitrogen ice temperature of 2 degrees Fahrenheit will double Pluto's atmosphere!
With heated skis, our Pluto downhiller skier would float on a cushion of nitrogen gas. Since the nitrogen condenses right onto the surface (as opposed to falling as snow), the surface is probably hard and icy, not champagne powder.
The idea that we slide on water ice (either on skates or skis) because the pressure of the skate or ski causes melting is a myth - see the San Francisco Exploratorium's site on the science of hockey for more on that topic. We will have to wait for laboratory data before we can discuss the slipperiness of nitrogen ice at temperatures typical of Pluto's surface.
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What would a human see on Pluto?
An astronaut (Plutonaut?) stepping from their spaceship onto Pluto's surface would quickly notice many unusual qualities of this alien environment. Perhaps the first impression would be the overall sense of darkness. The Sun, just a bright pinpoint in the sky, provides only a thousandth as much illumination to Pluto's surface as it does to Earth's, making daytime on the distant planet much darker than a cloudy, stormy day here at home. But Pluto's sky is strikingly clear, and in addition to the Sun, thousands of stars are visible, even in daytime. There are no clouds and Pluto's air is far too thin to cause the sky to be bright and blue, as it is on Earth. Depending on which part of the planet the astronaut landed, they might see Pluto's moon, Charon, looming in the sky some seven times larger than our own Moon appears in Earth's sky. Charon is smaller than Earth's Moon, but it is much closer to the planet, making it appear far larger. Remarkably, from a given location on Pluto, Charon remains motionless in the sky, going through its cycle of phases in 6.4 days without rising or setting.
If the astronaut landed on the opposite side of Pluto, they wouldn't see its moon no matter how long they waited, because Pluto and Charon keep their same sides toward one another all the time. On this side of Pluto, the moon never rises above the horizon.
Pluto's solid surface, with its hills, valleys, craters and other topographic features, is primarily made of ice, perhaps similar to environments near the North and South poles of our own planet. But the ice on Pluto's surface is primarily frozen nitrogen, not water. At Pluto's extremely low daytime temperature of about minus 380 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 233 Celsius or 40 degrees above absolute zero), nearly everything familiar to us, even gas, is frozen solid. When frozen, nitrogen (which is also the most abundant gas in Earth's atmosphere) forms large, transparent crystals several inches across. Much of Pluto's surface must be an amazing and fantasy-like crystalline world, unlike any other place except Neptune 's largest moon, Triton, where frozen nitrogen also makes up most of the landscape. On both Pluto and Triton, small amounts of methane (CH 4, natural gas on Earth) are frozen into the nitrogen crystals. Some regions of Pluto's surface have exposures of ordinary water ice and small amounts of frozen carbon monoxide (CO).
In the dim Pluto daylight, the astronaut may be able to see that the landscape has a yellowish or pinkish color caused by particles of haze that slowly fall from the thin, cloudless atmosphere. The feeble sunlight falling on the thin envelope of nitrogen, methane and carbon monoxide gases that make up Pluto's atmosphere causes chemical reactions that form a thin layer of smog over the entire planet. These smog particles are a mixture of complex organic compounds fashioned by Nature from carbon, nitrogen, hydrogen, and oxygen atoms. These atoms are broken apart from the molecules of gas in Pluto's atmosphere by ultraviolet light from the Sun. Over vast expanses of time, some of the particles making up the smog accumulate on the surface and are incorporated into the ices, giving them a faint yellow or pink color that can be clearly seen from Earth.
Some regions on Pluto have a dark gray tone, as seen from pictures and other observations made with large telescopes. These regions may hold a concentration of carbon-rich materials, or perhaps rocky minerals similar to those found on Earth, the Moon and other rocky planets. If the regions turn out to be icy landscapes tinged with carbon-rich materials, the carbon may have come from collisions with comets, which are rich in complex molecules inherited from the giant molecular cloud of dust and gas from which they (and the Sun and planets) formed. Similarly, if the darker gray regions consist of a rocky mineral coating on the ice, those minerals may also have come from the impacts of comets, which are known to be rich in silicate minerals. |
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