Signs of Weather Seen on Dwarf Planet (http://news.yahoo.com/s/space/20081118/sc_space/signsofweatherseenondwarfplanet)
Strange weather on the icy dwarf planet Eris could be causing changes that scientists are now seeing at the methane-ice surface of this distant object in our solar system.
Eris is the largest known solar-system object beyond the orbit of Neptune. It is larger than Pluto, with a diameter of ranging somewhere between about 1,490 miles and 1,860 miles (2,400 km and 3,000 km).
A team of researchers examined data on Eris collected from the MMT Observatory in Arizona. They specifically looked at concentrations of methane ice based on light-reflection and absorption information.
Their results show possibly nitrogen ice mixed in with the methane ice covering Eris' surface. And the relative amount of nitrogen ice increases with depth into the ice, they found.
...[Continued at the Article (http://news.yahoo.com/s/space/20081118/sc_space/signsofweatherseenondwarfplanet)]...
Extraterrestrial weather is cool. :)
In this case, very cool.
Quote from: revidc on November 21, 2008, 05:40:02 AM
It snowed on Mars last month. Admittedly it vaporized in the upper atmosphere before it even technically was snow, buuut it still counts. right?
They get dust devils on Mars.
Hahahaha, SHE's causing problems in Astronomical circles again:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/11/science/space/11pluto.html?_r=2
Awesome! Planet of strife, fuck yeah! Also, diameter is about 23 hundred kilometer :fnord:
Nitrogen. Ice.
That's quite the chilly dagger, miss.