I have previously posted about asteroid/dwarf planet Ceres before. The Dawn Spacecraft recently arrived at Ceres and began a comprehensive study of the dwarf planet that has never been done before. One of the strange things that Dawn found on Ceres were bright spots that confounded scientists at first. What were they?
Via NASA/Dawn
The bright spots were discovered in a crater now known as Occator, an 80-km diameter crater at 19.5° latitude on Ceres. They are called faculae which means “bright spots”. Faculae are more commonly known as the bright regions on the Sun surrounding a sunspot. Where do the faculae on Ceres come from?
One theory is that they are ice spots in the crater that are reflecting sunlight or salt deposits left over after salty water on the surface evaporated away. These spots might have come from Ceres actually having a dusty surface, and minor impacts on the surface exposed the underlying ice or salt.
Another theory, which is more widely accepted, is that the spots are actually ice geysers or cryovolcanoes (volcanoes that spew ice rather than lava). This is believed to be the true cause as Dawn has seen haze above the spots.
We will probably learn more as Dawn continues its reconnaissance around Ceres. And if these are ice features, Ceres could be a great place to build a future way station in the Solar System.
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