3.9 Article

Pluto's Haze Abundance and Size Distribution from Limb Scatter Observations by MVIC

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PLANETARY SCIENCE JOURNAL
卷 2, 期 3, 页码 -

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IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.3847/PSJ/abdcaf

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By analyzing observations of Pluto and Charon, researchers determined the size and distribution of haze particles in Pluto's atmosphere, revealing the need for bimodal or power-law distributions to accurately describe the observations. The study suggests a lower aggregate aerosol growth rate in Pluto's atmosphere compared to previous findings, indicating a higher charge-to-radius ratio and lower sedimentation velocity for large particles.
The New Horizons spacecraft observed Pluto and Charon at solar-phase angles between 16 degrees and 169 degrees. In this work, we use the Multispectral Visible Imaging Camera (MVIC) observations to construct multiwavelength phase curves of Pluto's atmosphere, using the limb scatter technique. Observational artifacts and biases were removed using Charon as a representative airless body. The size and distribution of the haze particles were constrained using a Titan fractal aggregate phase function. We find that monodispersed and log-normal populations cannot simultaneously describe the observed steep forward scattering, indicative of wavelength-scale particles, and the non-negligible backscattering indicative of particles much smaller than the wavelength. Instead, we find it necessary to use bimodal or power-law distributions, especially below similar to 200 km, to properly describe the MVIC observations. Above 200 km, where the atmosphere is isotropically scattering, a monodisperse, log-normal, or a bimodal/power law approximating a monodispersed population is able to fit the phase curves well. As compared to the results of previously published articles, we find that Pluto's atmosphere must contain haze particle number densities an order of magnitude greater for small (similar to 10 nm) and large (similar to 1 mu m) radii, and relatively fewer intermediate sizes (similar to 100 nm). These conclusions support a lower aggregate aerosol growth rate than that found by Gao et al., indicating a higher charge-to-radius ratio, upwards of 60e (-) mu m(-1). In order to generate large particles with a lower growth rate, the atmosphere must also have a lower sedimentation velocity (

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