A reader writes concerning Ceres and some white spots:
I refuse to believe the bright spots on Ceres are just reflections. A reflection would vary in intensity with rotation. I need a better explanation.
Since one of the white spots had been previously observed by HST, it’s doubtful that this is a camera artifact / defect. Here is a report on the white spots.
NASA’s Dawn spacecraft has beamed home the best-ever photo
of the mysterious bright spots that speckle the surface of the dwarf planet Ceres.
The new image resolves Ceres’ strange spots, which are found inside a crater about 55 miles (90 kilometers) wide, into a cluster comprised of several patches, some of which were not visible in previous photos
. But it doesn’t solve the mystery of the spots’ origin and composition.
“At least eight spots can be seen next to the largest bright area, which scientists think is approximately 6 miles (9 km) wide,” NASA officials wrote in a statement today (June 22). “A highly reflective material is responsible for these spots — ice and salt are leading possibilities
, but scientists are considering other options, too.”
I speculated that perhaps Ceres was perhaps not rotating quickly enough, but space.com reports otherwise:
A day on Ceres lasts a little over 9 Earth-hours, while it takes 4.6 Earth-years to travel around the sun.
At least, I’d think it would be fast enough to cause a variability in reflection. IO9.com presents speculation from the principal investigator (the link IO9 has for the principal investigator is broken, otherwise I’d use it), Chris Russell:
“Ceres’ bright spot can now be seen to have a companion of lesser brightness, but apparently in the same basin. This may be pointing to a volcano-like origin of the spots, but we will have to wait for better resolution before we can make such geologic interpretations.”
The comment section also has some semi-viable speculation.
Volcanos require a magma layer, but several moons have known volcanic activity – usually caused by the gravitational proximity of the primary – Ceres has no primary.
I briefly speculated that it might be chemical, but given the HST observations are more than a decade old, you’d think the material involved in the reaction would be exhausted, unless lower temperatures slowed down the reaction – but then would it be visible? But my chemical knowledge is miniscule.
Finally, the IO9 story also tells us what makes a scientist a scientist:
I admit it: I’m totally jazzed that we’ve got such a blatant mystery staring right at us, daring us to figure it out with ever more obvious clues!