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Wired's Nick Stockton reports.

Pluto has a problem: Its thin, nitrogen atmosphere shouldn’t be there. Ultraviolet rays from the sun should have knocked it away, molecule by molecule, in the dwarf planet’s first few thousand years. Four billion years later, Pluto’s atmosphere is still there, a gauzy interplanetary mystery.

[. . .]

High noon on Pluto looks like dusk on Earth. But even that small amount of solar energy is enough to turn frozen nitrogen on Pluto’s surface into gas. Once aloft, Pluto’s gravity is too weak to keep the particles from being blown away by ultraviolet radiation. (In case you’re wondering, Earth’s mass is enough to keep its atmosphere mostly safe from getting blown off into space.)

Pluto has been around for about four billion years, and according to the best math, it should have lost about 7,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 grams of nitrogen (give or take a zero) since then. But scientists currently estimate that the planet has about 30,000,000,000,000,000 grams of nitrogen atmosphere, and loses about 1,500,000,000,000 grams each year. “Basically, it would take only a few thousand to tens of thousands of years to lose that atmosphere,” says Kelsi Singer, post-doctoral researcher at the Southwest Research Center and co-author of the paper. Basically, that’s not a very long time.

Considering that Pluto has been around for more than four billion years, the odds are pretty friggin’ slim that humans would meet the dwarf planet during its brief phase of atmosphere-having. No, something is replenishing the supply. Scientists, you got some ‘splaining to do.
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