Photochemistry, Ion Chemistry, and Haze Formation in Pluto’s Atmosphere
Abstract
The detection of ethylene (C2H4) and acetylene (C2H2) in Pluto’s atmosphere provides important ground-truth observations for validating photochemical models of Pluto’s atmosphere. Their detection also confirms the production of precursor chemical compounds involved in the formation of tholins, which are thought to give Pluto’s surface its reddish color. Photochemical models predict many other hydrocarbon and nitrile products, currently undetected, which may also be participants in tholin production on Pluto’s surface or on atmospheric haze particles. The observed atmospheric haze layer extending to altitudes of ~140 km above Pluto’s surface, suggests a global and very robust process of atmospheric particle nucleation, growth, and sedimentation onto Pluto’s surface. The high altitude extent of the haze layer suggests that the nucleation process begins above the expected altitude range where hydrocarbons become supersaturated (below ~30 km altitude). This situation may be analogous to that in Titan’s atmosphere, wherein nucleation and aerosol growth is directly related to large negative ion production. In the case of Pluto, this means that nucleation may occur at altitudes as high as 1200 km altitude where ionization in Pluto’s atmosphere peaks. In this paper we discuss these processes and their implications for haze formation in Pluto’s atmosphere and its deposition onto Pluto’s surface. This work was supported by NASA's New Horizons project.
- Publication:
-
AAS/Division for Planetary Sciences Meeting Abstracts #47
- Pub Date:
- November 2015
- Bibcode:
- 2015DPS....4710511S