Primordial N2 provides a cosmochemical explanation for the existence of Sputnik Planitia, Pluto
Christopher R. Glein, J. Hunter Waite Jr

TL;DR
This paper investigates the origin of Pluto's N2, proposing it was accreted primordial during formation, supported by models and New Horizons data, with implications for Pluto's surface features and atmospheric history.
Contribution
It introduces a model for Pluto's N2 origin, combining observational data and theoretical estimates, to support a primordial accretion hypothesis over other sources.
Findings
Primordial N2 likely accounts for Sputnik Planitia's nitrogen.
Cometary and solar models can explain the N2 inventory but predict high CO/N2 ratios.
Processes like fractional crystallization and reactions may explain CO depletion.
Abstract
The presence of N2 in the surface environment of Pluto is critical in creating Pluto's richness of features and processes. Here, we propose that the nitrogen atoms in the N2 observed on Pluto were accreted in that chemical form during the formation of Pluto. We use New Horizons data and models to estimate the amounts of N2 in the following exterior reservoirs: atmosphere, escape, photochemistry, and surface. The total exterior inventory is deduced to be dominated by a glacial sheet of N2-rich ices at Sputnik Planitia, or by atmospheric escape if past rates of escape were much faster than at present. Pluto's atmosphere is a negligible reservoir of N2, and photochemical destruction of N2 may also be of little consequence. Estimates are made of the amount of N2 accreted by Pluto based on cometary and solar compositions. It is found that the cometary model can account for the amount of N2…
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