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Scientists get their last look at Pluto’s mysterious dark spots

An image taken by the New Horizons spacecraft and released by NASA on Saturday shows Pluto's mysterious dark spots, which are evenly spaced apart and about 300 miles across each.

An image taken by the New Horizons spacecraft and released by NASA on Saturday shows Pluto’s mysterious dark spots, which are evenly spaced apart and about 300 miles across each.

(NASA/JHUAPL/SWRI)
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The closer New Horizons gets to Pluto, the more puzzling the dwarf planet becomes.

The latest image released by NASA highlights four mysterious dark spots lined up along Pluto’s equator. Each of the spots is about 300 miles across, and they are evenly spaced along a dark belt that rings the planet’s surface.

When New Horizons spied the spots a few weeks ago, mission scientists were left scratching their heads.

“It’s a real puzzle -- we don’t know what the spots are,” Alan Stern, the mission’s principal investigator, said at the time.

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INFOGRAPHIC: New Horizons’ path to Pluto

They still don’t. The new images, taken by New Horizons from about 2.5 million miles away, reveal that the boundaries of the circles aren’t sharp but irregular. This could be a sign that whatever process created the dark areas was more complicated than scientists first thought.

“We can’t tell whether they’re plateaus or plains, or whether they’re brightness variations on a completely smooth surface,” Jeff Moore, a member of the New Horizons team based at NASA’s Ames Research Center in Mountain View, Calif., said in a statement.

Curt Niebur, the mission’s program scientist at NASA headquarters in Washington, said the position of the spots was perplexing too.

“It’s weird that they’re spaced so regularly,” he said in the statement.

Unfortunately, the scientists aren’t likely to get answers from Tuesday’s historic flyby, which will take place at 4:49 a.m. Pacific Daylight Time. The spotted side of the planet will be facing toward the large moon Charon and away from New Horizons as it zooms past at 36,000 mph.

That means this picture is “the last, best look that anyone will have of Pluto’s far side for decades to come,” Stern said.

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