Modeling Pluto's Minimum Pressure: Implications for Haze Production
Perianne E. Johnson, Leslie A. Young, Silvia Protopapa, Bernard, Schmitt, Leila R. Gabasova, Briley L. Lewis, John A. Stansberry, Kathy E., Mandt, Oliver L. White

TL;DR
This paper models Pluto's surface pressure to understand haze production variability, using an energy balance model to explore how different nitrogen ice distributions affect atmospheric conditions and haze deposition.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive modeling approach to assess how static and mobile N2 ice distributions influence Pluto's surface pressure and haze formation.
Findings
Surface pressure drops below 0.06 microbar, atmosphere becomes localized.
Haze production ceases when pressure falls below 10^-3 microbar.
Different ice distributions significantly affect atmospheric and haze deposition patterns.
Abstract
Pluto has a heterogeneous surface, despite a global haze deposition rate of ~1 micrometer per orbit (Cheng et al., 2017; Grundy et al., 2018). While there could be spatial variation in the deposition rate, this has not yet been rigorously quantified, and naively the haze should coat the surface more uniformly than was observed. One way (among many) to explain this contradiction is for atmospheric pressure at the surface to drop low enough to interrupt haze production and stop the deposition of particles onto part of the surface, driving heterogeneity. If the surface pressure drops to less than 10^-3 - 10^-4 microbar and the CH4 mixing ratio remains nearly constant at the observed 2015 value, the atmosphere becomes transparent to ultraviolet radiation (Young et al., 2018), which would shut off haze production at its source. If the surface pressure falls below 0.06 microbar, the…
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