The Puzzling Detection of X-rays From Pluto by Chandra
C. M. Lisse, R. L. McNutt, Jr., S. J. Wolk, F. Bagenal, S. A. Stern,, G. R. Gladstone, T. E. Cravens, M. E. Hill, P. Kollmann, H. A. Weaver, D. F., Strobel, H. A. Elliott, D. J. McComas, R.P. Binzel, B.T. Snios, A. Bhardwaj,, A. Chutjian, L. A. Young, C.B. Olkin, and K.A. Ennico

TL;DR
This study reports the detection of X-ray emission from Pluto using Chandra, explores potential sources like charge exchange with solar wind ions, and discusses the implications for Pluto's atmospheric and space environment.
Contribution
First detection of X-ray emission from Pluto, analyzing its possible origins and the role of solar wind interactions in producing the observed X-rays.
Findings
Detected X-ray emission at > 99.95% confidence level.
Charge exchange with solar wind ions is a plausible source.
Pluto's X-ray power is comparable to other solar system sources.
Abstract
Using Chandra ACIS-S, we have obtained imaging Xray spectrophotometry of the Pluto system in support of the New Horizons flyby on 14 July 2015. 174 ksec of observations were obtained on 4 visits in Feb 2014 to Aug 2015. We measured a net signal of 6.8 counts and a noise level of 1.2 counts in a comoving 11 x 11 pixel box (100 x 100 R_Pluto) in the 0.31 to 0.60 keV passband for a detection at > 99.95 C.L. The Pluto photons do not match the background spectrum, are coincident with a 90% flux aperture comoving with Pluto, and are not sky source confused. The mean 0.31 to 0.60 keV Xray power from Pluto is 200 MW, in the midrange of Xray power levels seen for known solar system emission sources: auroral precipitation, solar Xray scattering, and charge exchange (CXE) between solar wind (SW) ions & atmospheric neutrals. We eliminate auroral effects as a source, as Pluto has no known magnetic…
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