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1 proximately 40 per cent greater than that of Pluto).
2 tains a warm ice conductive ice shell unlike Pluto.
3 cesses, of a type and scale so far unique to Pluto.
4 ions are accelerated and/or deflected around Pluto.
5 as a result of volatile transport cycles on Pluto.
6 uction of an extensive haze that encompasses Pluto.
7 stimated present-day heat-flow conditions on Pluto.
8 ely replicate the observed fault networks on Pluto.
9 sulting reorientation (true polar wander) of Pluto.
10 x 10(22) kilograms, or 1.27 +/- 0.02 that of Pluto.
11 s a result of a giant impact with primordial Pluto.
13 s spacecraft in the Tartarus Dorsa region of Pluto (220 degrees -250 degrees E, 0 degrees -20 degrees
16 Here we show that P1 and P2's proximity to Pluto and Charon, the fact that P1 and P2 are on near-ci
17 have masses that are small compared to both Pluto and Charon-that is, between 5 x 10(-4) and 1 x 10(
21 ould have shaped other methane reservoirs on Pluto and help explain the appearance of the bladed terr
27 ore distant satellites of Pluto, reveal that Pluto and its moons comprise an unusual, highly compact,
28 near the same wavelengths in the spectra of Pluto and Neptune's satellite Triton are due to CH4 on t
29 ain N-bearing molecule in the atmospheres of Pluto and Triton and probably the main nitrogen reservoi
30 face appearance and in climate properties on Pluto and Triton, and give further support to the hypoth
31 long-term volatile transport simulations of Pluto and Triton, using the same initial conditions and
35 rary cold-trapping of material escaping from Pluto, as well as the photolytic processing of this mate
36 other solar nebula bodies such as Triton and Pluto, but is very different from that of the regular sa
39 re used to demonstrate that the formation of Pluto-Charon by means of a large collision is quite plau
42 sitions, and the New Horizons mission to the Pluto-Charon system allows us to test hypotheses on the
43 onsistent with collisional formation for the Pluto-Charon system in which the precursor objects may h
44 der could have moved the feature towards the Pluto-Charon tidal axis, on the far side of Pluto from C
46 od (about 570 days), very different from the Pluto/Charon system, which was hitherto the only previou
47 years of Charon's formation, ice deposits on Pluto concentrate into a single cap centred near a latit
53 the satellite Charon from its parent planet Pluto, giving separate spectra of the two objects from 1
56 revious searches for other satellites around Pluto have been unsuccessful, but they were not sensitiv
59 on a recent model representing conditions on Pluto, in which deepening penitentes reproduce both the
63 rfacing and a relatively flat surface, while Pluto is not tidally activated and displays a pronounced
65 g that shows that ice quickly accumulates on Pluto near latitudes of 30 degrees north and south, even
66 N2 are inconsistent with the observations on Pluto of non-brittle deformation within the N2-ice sheet
68 pparent depletion in volatiles compared with Pluto, perhaps as the result of a more energetic impact.
69 indeed form as a result of an impact and if Pluto possesses a subsurface ocean, the required positiv
70 the discovery of two additional moons around Pluto, provisionally designated S/2005 P 1 (hereafter P1
72 on the absence of more distant satellites of Pluto, reveal that Pluto and its moons comprise an unusu
73 These data reveal evidence for extinction in Pluto's atmosphere and show that it has indeed changed,
77 It is unclear whether the current state of Pluto's atmosphere is representative of its average stat
83 use high-resolution numerical simulations of Pluto's climate to show that the processes forming them
90 Here we report observational evidence that Pluto's haze particles are bimodally distributed, which
92 of Sputnik Planitia can substantially alter Pluto's inertia tensor, resulting in a reorientation of
93 existence of these massive features suggests Pluto's interior structure and evolution allows for eith
97 on near-circular orbits in the same plane as Pluto's large satellite Charon, along with their apparen
100 hat is, between 5 x 10(-4) and 1 x 10(-5) of Pluto's mass, and between 5 x 10(-3) and 1 x 10(-4) of C
103 nt of gaseous methane a few kilometres above Pluto's plains that favours methane condensation at moun
104 a positive gravity signature that locks, as Pluto's rotation slows, to a longitude directly opposite
109 on monoxide, and nitrogen ices that dominate Pluto's surface have complicated spatial distributions r
112 been proposed as a coolant; however, because Pluto's thermal structure is expected to be in radiative
113 a, is located very close to the longitude of Pluto's tidal axis and may be an impact feature, by anal
118 es of the southern hemisphere illuminated by Pluto-shine and also images taken during the approach ph
120 on similarly sized KBOs that do not orbit a Pluto-sized object to draw an escaping atmosphere from,
121 compositional data showing that terrains on Pluto span a variety of ages, ranging from relatively an
124 able optical depths form sporadically in the Pluto system, and that rich satellite systems may be fou
126 egrees, almost directly opposite the side of Pluto that always faces Charon as a result of tidal lock
128 ) and S/2005 P 2 (hereafter P2), which makes Pluto the first Kuiper belt object known to have multipl
133 ed, Charon raises a permanent tidal bulge on Pluto, which greatly enhances the gravity signature of t
134 (approximately 1,200 km) about half that of Pluto, which makes it larger, relative to its primary, t
135 Charon is found to be different from that of Pluto, with water ice in crystalline form covering most