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Scientists just figured out how Pluto got its heart

A year after NASA’s New Horizon spacecraft captured a stunning image of a heart on the surface of Pluto scientists can reveal what caused the symbol of love to appear plastered across the dwarf planet.
By Agencies

A year after NASA’s New Horizon spacecraft captured a stunning image of a heart on the surface of Pluto scientists can reveal what caused the symbol of love to appear plastered across the dwarf planet.


A new study published in Nature appears to solve the mystery of how the heart-shaped nitrogen glacier known as the Sputnik Planum, located in the Tombaugh Regio region, was formed on the planet and debunks previous theories surrounding its origins.


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French scientists used data and observations collected during the New Horizons flyby last year to create a computer simulation of Pluto’s atmospheric development over the last 50,000 years.


The simulation distributed nitrogen, carbon monoxide, and methane ices a few millimeters thick across the planet and allowed the scientists to look at different "climate" scenarios that could explain Pluto’s ice distribution.


 

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