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发表于 2006-3-5 07:47:27
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part 3
Science FAQs
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What kind of life could there be 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.
Life as we know it requires three things:
Water
Biogenic elements such as carbon, phosphorus and sulfur, in addition to the oxygen and hydrogen in water
A source of energy (light, heat, chemical potential) that a living organism can use
Pluto's surface is far too cold for liquid water, but its interior is probably warm and maintained that way by the slow decay of naturally occurring elements such as uranium, potassium-40 and thorium.
Enough heat is released that a water ocean may exist between the rocky core of Pluto and its thick outer layer of ice. Planetary scientists have long thought that icy satellites might possess oceanic layers underneath their surface ice layers. The discovery by the Galileo orbiter that Europa, Callisto and possibly Ganymede possess interior oceans greatly increases our expectation that Pluto also possesses an ocean. Pluto's ocean is also likely to contain biogenic elements in a solution, especially if it is in contact with an organic-rich layer.
Where Pluto probably does not pass astrobiological muster is in the matter of sufficient energy to power life. Pluto's ocean would be dark and cold - near-freezing. Even if in contact with a rock core, it is almost certainly true that this modest core is today insufficiently hot to be volcanically active or even to drive circulations. So it is difficult to argue for a deep biosphere on Pluto today. On the other hand, it is also true that Pluto's rock core was much hotter and probably active in the geological past, so it is not utter lunacy to speculate that some form of primitive, microbial life may have evolved long ago and just might have once plied the "Styxian seas" of Pluto.
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What is the scientific motivation to send a spacecraft to Pluto?
A special panel of the National Academy of Sciences that was formed to advise NASA on a planetary science strategy for the next 10 years (the so-called "Decadal Survey") ranked the exploration of Kuiper Belt Objects, including Pluto, as its highest scientific priority. The New Horizons mission is NASA's way to implement that recommendation.
The key scientific objectives of the New Horizons mission are:
Characterize the global geology and morphology of Pluto and Charon - What do Pluto and Charon look like close up?
Map the surface composition of Pluto and Charon - What are Pluto and Charon made of, and how are those materials distributed over the surface of each object?
Characterize the neutral atmosphere of Pluto and its escape rate - Why does Pluto have an atmosphere and how long will it last?
Generally, New Horizons seeks to understand where Pluto and Charon "fit in" with the other objects in the solar system. We currently classify the planets into groups. Earth, Mars, Venus and Mercury are the "terrestrial" planets, which are mostly rocky objects. In contrast, the "gas giant" planets, which include Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune, are dominated by thick, molecular hydrogen atmospheres. Pluto and Charon belong to a third category that could be called "ice dwarfs." They have solid surfaces but, unlike the terrestrial planets, a significant portion of their mass is icy material (such as frozen water, carbon dioxide, molecular nitrogen, methane and carbon monoxide).
Pluto and Charon are also widely considered to be among the largest objects in the Kuiper Belt, a vast reservoir of icy objects located just outside of Neptune's orbit and extending out to about 50 astronomical units from the Sun. The Kuiper Belt is thought to be the source of most short-period comets - those with orbits shorter than 200 years - so scientists really want to compare the composition and surface properties of Pluto and Charon to those of cometary nuclei.
Pluto and Charon are truly part of the current "frontier" in planetary science. No spacecraft has ever explored them, yet they promise to tell us much about the origins and outskirts of our solar system.
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How does New Horizons plan to measure Pluto's atmosphere?
The New Horizons mission has a plan for measuring Pluto's atmosphere. After flying by Pluto, the New Horizons spacecraft enters the planet's shadow. As the spacecraft moves into Pluto's shadow, sunlight must pass through the planet's atmosphere before reaching the spacecraft. Absorption of sunlight by Pluto's atmosphere is detected as characteristic "dips" in the ultraviolet part of the spectrum of light measured by New Horizons' Alice instrument. This technique is a very powerful method for measuring even trace amounts of atmospheric gas.
In addition, radio waves sent from Earth to New Horizons will bend as they pass through Pluto's atmosphere. The amount of bending of the radio waves is detected by the New Horizons Radio Science Experiment (called REX) and is related to both the average molecular mass and the temperature of the atmosphere.
Together, these ultraviolet and radio "occultation experiments" provide powerful probes of Pluto's tenuous atmosphere.
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Are there other interesting objects in the solar system near Pluto?
Charon, of course! There may be other objects in the Pluto-Charon system, but they haven't yet been found. However, the current limits are not very restrictive objects about 60 miles (100 kilometers) wide could be found. In fact, the New Horizons team hopes to improve the search so that objects in the gravitational stability zone of Pluto-Charon as small as 3 to 6 miles (about 5 to 10 kilometers) could be detected.
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Will Pluto's atmosphere "freeze out" by the time the spacecraft arrives?
Pluto is currently moving away from the Sun, having reached its closest approach distance in 1989. Generally, the closer an object is to the Sun, the warmer it should be and the more rapidly its surface ice should sublime into space. The sublimation of ices on the surface of Pluto is responsible for its tenuous atmosphere. As Pluto moves away from the Sun it will get colder and, eventually, its atmosphere will almost completely condense back onto the surface.
The actual situation is a bit more complicated than the simple illustration discussed above. Because of "thermal lag," the time of Pluto's closest approach to the Sun in 1989 was probably not when its surface temperature was greatest, just as the temperature on Earth is hottest at mid-afternoon rather than noon. In the case of Pluto, the latest observations reveal that the atmosphere has thickened during the past decade. But this trend will definitely reverse as Pluto continues moving away from the Sun. Scientists don't know exactly when the condensation will start to dominate sublimation - which is why they want to get to Pluto as soon as possible!
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Can New Horizons go to recently discovered Kuiper Belt Objects Quaoar and Sedna?
Unfortunately, New Horizons can't reach either object. Quaoar is located far away from the trajectory of any spacecraft that travels toward Pluto during the next several decades. The outer solar system is a big place with a lot of volume! New Horizons is just our first attempt to probe this region, but scientists are sure Quaoar and Sedna will be high on the list of candidate targets as they contemplate other missions to explore the outer solar system during the next several decades.
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How do astronomers know about the composition and other characteristics of Pluto's surface?
In the 1970s technological advances in telescopes and other instruments brought tiny, faint Pluto within range for Earth-bound observers. In 1975, using the technique of light analysis called spectroscopy, astronomers Dale Cruikshank, David Morrison and Carl Pilcher measured a portion of Pluto's infrared spectrum using one of the then-largest telescopes on Earth.
They aimed the 4-meter Mayall Telescope and its powerful spectrometer (located at Kitt Peak National Observatory in Arizona) at Pluto and recorded the signature, or spectral fingerprint, of frozen methane. This discovery gave the first indication that Pluto's surface is icy rather than rocky, and opened a new era of investigations of the realm of small icy objects in the outer solar system that continues today. Working with other colleagues, Cruikshank (now a New Horizons team member) later discovered the frozen nitrogen and carbon monoxide, as well as evidence for the colored organic chemicals that make up Pluto's surface.
From our understanding of the properties of the ices of Pluto, we know that some of them slowly evaporate from the surface and enter the atmosphere as gases, much in the way that ice cubes evaporate in the freezer of the refrigerator. Ices of carbon monoxide and methane have also been detected on Pluto's surface using telescope measurements of reflected sunlight (at near infrared wavelengths). Scientists therefore believe that the atmosphere also contains trace amounts of carbon monoxide and methane gases supplied by sublimation of their ices.
Thus, even frigid, distant and tiny Pluto is a dynamic world where the processes of nature continuously change the surface and the atmosphere, creating an alien and exotic world that beckons us from Earth to visit, explore and learn. |
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