کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
8133749 | 1523476 | 2018 | 22 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |
عنوان انگلیسی مقاله ISI
Breaking up is hard to do: Global cartography and topography of Pluto's mid-sized icy Moon Charon from New Horizons
ترجمه فارسی عنوان
شکستن کار سختی است: نقشه کشی جهانی و توپوگرافی پلوتو در اواسط اندازه یخبندان ماه شارون از افق های جدید
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موضوعات مرتبط
مهندسی و علوم پایه
علوم زمین و سیارات
علوم فضا و نجوم
چکیده انگلیسی
The 2015 New Horizons flyby through the Pluto system produced the first high-resolution topographic maps of Pluto and Charon, the most distant objects so mapped. Global integrated mosaics of the illuminated surface of Pluto's large icy moon Charon have been produced using both framing camera and line scan camera data (including four-color images at up to 1.47â¯km pixel scales), showing the best resolution data at all areas of the surface. Digital elevation models (DEMs) with vertical precisions of up to â¼0.1â¯km were constructed for â¼40% of Charon using stereo imagery. Local radii estimates for the surface were also determined from the cartographic control network solution for the LORRI framing camera data, which validate the stereo solutions. Charon is moderately cratered, the largest of which is â¼250-km across and â¼6â¯km deep. Charon has a topographic range over the observed hemisphere from lowest to highest of â¼19â¯km, the largest topographic amplitude of any mid-sized icy body (including Ceres) other than Iapetus. Unlike Saturn's icy moons whose topographic signature is dominated by global relaxation of topography and subsequent impact cratering, large-scale tectonics and regional resurfacing dominate Charon's topography. Most of Charon's encounter hemisphere north of the equator (Oz Terra) is broken into large polygonal blocks by a network of wide troughs with typically 3-6â¯km relief; the deepest of these occur near the illuminated pole and are up to 13â¯km deep with respect to the global mean radius, the deepest known surfaces on Charon. The edge of this terrain is defined by large tilted blocks sloping â¼5° or so, the crests of which rise to 5 or 6â¯km above Charon mean, the highest known points on Charon. The southern resurfaced plains, Vulcan Planitia, consist of rolling plains, locally fractured and pitted, that are depressed â¼1â¯km below the mean elevation of the disrupted northern terrains of Oz Terra that comprise much of the northern hemisphere (but â¼2-2.5â¯km below the surfaces of the blocks themselves). These plains roll downward gently to the south with a topographic range of â¼5â¯km. The outer margins of Vulcan Planitia along the boundary with Oz Terra form a 2-3-km-deep trough, suggesting viscous flow along the outer margins. Isolated massifs 2-4â¯km high, also flanked by annular moats, lie within the planitia itself. The plains may be formed from volcanic resurfacing of cryogenic fluids, but the tilted blocks along the outer margins and the isolated and tilted massifs within Vulcan Planitia also suggest that much of Charon has been broken into large blocks, some of which have been rotated and some of which have foundered into Charon's upper “mantle”, now exposed as Vulcan Planitia, a history that may be most similar to the disrupted terrains of Ariel.
ناشر
Database: Elsevier - ScienceDirect (ساینس دایرکت)
Journal: Icarus - Volume 315, 15 November 2018, Pages 124-145
Journal: Icarus - Volume 315, 15 November 2018, Pages 124-145
نویسندگان
Paul Michael Schenk, Ross A. Beyer, William B. McKinnon, Jeffrey M. Moore, John R. Spencer, Oliver L. White, Kelsi Singer, Orkan M. Umurhan, Francis Nimmo, Tod R. Lauer, William M. Grundy, Stuart Robbins, S. Alan Stern, Harold A. Weaver, Leslie A. Young,