Tag

Tombaugh Regio

All articles tagged with #tombaugh regio

New Horizons Reveals Pluto’s Giant Hearts and Hidden Ocean Clues
space10 days ago

New Horizons Reveals Pluto’s Giant Hearts and Hidden Ocean Clues

In July 2015, NASA’s New Horizons zipped past Pluto at about 32,000 mph, capturing most of its high‑resolution imagery in a ~30‑minute window and unveiling Tombaugh Regio—the heart-shaped region whose western lobe, Sputnik Planitia, is a vast nitrogen ice sheet roughly 1,200 by 2,000 km and about 4 km thick. The total data from the encounter amounted to about 6.25 GB, downlinked over about 15 months at 1–4 kb/s as the spacecraft continued outward. These findings — from the nitrogen ice plains to high‑albedo uplands, atmospheric haze, and clues to subsurface oceans — fundamentally reshaped planetary science and set the stage for decades of Pluto research as New Horizons travels beyond the Kuiper Belt.

"New Horizons Discovers Heart-Shaped Glacier on Pluto"
space3 years ago

"New Horizons Discovers Heart-Shaped Glacier on Pluto"

NASA's New Horizons spacecraft captured a stunning image of a heart-shaped glacier on Pluto's surface, known as Tombaugh Regio, made of nitrogen and methane. The spacecraft reached Pluto in 2015, becoming the first probe to fly by Pluto and its moons. Pluto was once considered the ninth planet in the solar system but was reclassified as a dwarf planet in 2006. Its surface is coated in ice made of water, methane, and nitrogen and is believed to have a rocky core and possibly a deep ocean.