Salt clouds discovered on iconic Pink Planet as scientists finally get a good look at frosty orb

Scientists have discovered salt clouds surrounding the notable “Pink Planet,” according to a new study released by astronomers at Northwestern University.Discovered in 2013, the vibrantly colored planet is one of the coldest known celestial objects ever directly imaged, and until recently has been too faint to examine from Earth’s light. However, recent observations by the James Webb Space Telescope have provided evidence for a theory scientists first hypothesized over 15 years ago: that the “Pink Planet” had salt clouds within its atmosphere.“The Pink Planet is the coldest companion ever discovered using ground-based instruments,” Northwestern’s Aneesh Baburaj, who led the study, said.“Many teams all around the world performed follow-up observations to study its light, but it was too faint for ground-based instruments.That made it a perfect target,” Baburaj continued.

“When we finally obtained its spectrum, it immediately looked interesting.But once we started digging deeper into the data, we realized it was not like anything we had analyzed before.”According to the study, the data from the planet revealed a mix of water vapor, methane, carbon dioxide, ammonia and other molecules.When the researchers tried to reconstruct the simulated atmosphere, it did not match the planetary observations unless there were unique, salty features in them.“We ran simulations with clouds, and the results aligned with what we know about cold planets,” Baburaj said.

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“We tried three different types of clouds, and salt clouds fit best.When we accounted for salt clouds, it subdued the signature of molecules hidden deeper in the companion’s atmosphere.

Then, the results became physically possible.”NASA said the Pink Planet was fir...

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Publisher: New York Post

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