Data from the New Horizons mission to Pluto show no craters on Sputnik
Planum down to the detection limit (2 km for low resolution data, 625 m
for high resolution data). The number of small Kuiper Belt Objects that
should be impacting Pluto is known to some degree from various
astronomical surveys. We combine these geological and telescopic
observations to make an order of magnitude estimate that the surface age
of Sputnik Planum must be less than 10 million years. This maximum
surface age is surprisingly young and implies that this area of Pluto
must be undergoing active resurfacing, presumably through some
cryo-geophysical process. We discuss three possible resurfacing
mechanisms and the implications of each one for Pluto’s physical
properties.
Impact interval onto Sputnik Planum, Pluto, in Earth years as a function of impactor size. |
The Surface Age of Sputnik Planum
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