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Astronomy Picture of the Day
Discover the cosmos!
Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer.
2019/06/16
Unusual Mountain Ahuna Mons on Asteroid Ceres
Image credits:
Dawn Mission
,
NASA
,
JPL-Caltech
,
UCLA
, MPS/DLR/IDA
Explanation:
What created this unusual mountain? There is a new theory.
Ahuna Mons
is the largest mountain on the largest known asteroid in
our Solar System
,
Ceres
, which orbits our Sun in the
main asteroid belt
between
Mars
and
Jupiter
.
Ahuna Mons
, though, is
like nothing
that humanity has ever seen before. For one thing, its slopes are garnished not with
old craters
but young vertical streaks. The
new hypothesis
, based on numerous gravity measurements, holds that a bubble of mud rose from deep within the
dwarf planet
and
pushed through
the icy surface at a weak point rich in
reflective salt
-- and then froze. The bright streaks are thought to be similar to other recently surfaced material such as visible in
Ceres' famous bright spots
. The
featured double-height digital image
was constructed from surface maps taken of Ceres in 2016 by the
robotic Dawn mission
. Successfully completing its mission in 2018,
Dawn continues to orbit Ceres
even though it has exhausted the fuel needed to keep its antennas pointed toward
Earth
.
Authors & editors:
Robert J. nemiroff
(MTU)
&
Jerry T. Bonnell
(UMCP)
Web designed by Simon G. Kupisz, 2020
NASA Official:
Phillip Newman
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at
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/
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&
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