Investigating the extent of bladed terrain on Pluto via photometric surface roughness
I. Mishra, R. Dhingra, B. J. Buratti, B. Seignovert, and O. L. White

TL;DR
This study uses photometric analysis to investigate the surface roughness of Pluto's non-encounter hemisphere, suggesting the presence of bladed terrain characterized by high surface roughness, similar to that observed in the encounter hemisphere.
Contribution
It introduces a novel application of photometric modeling to infer surface roughness and potential terrain types on Pluto's less-studied hemisphere using low-resolution images.
Findings
Non-encounter hemisphere bladed terrain is very rough ($q \,=\, 0.47$).
Median roughness is more than twice that of other regions.
Photometric analysis can reveal terrain features in low-resolution images.
Abstract
NASA's New Horizons spacecraft discovered fields of sub-parallel sets of steep ridges situated in the high-altitude, low-latitude regions in Pluto's encounter hemisphere called 'bladed terrain'. Thought to be formed due to sublimational erosion of methane ice, bladed terrain represents an active response of Pluto's landscape to current and past climates. The observation of a strong methane signature within the low latitudes of Pluto's non-encounter hemisphere points to the possibility that this terrain type is also present there. To test this hypothesis, in the absence of high resolution images of Pluto's non-encounter hemisphere, we employ photometric analysis of the methane rich regions. We specifically focus on determining the macroscopic surface roughness in selected images, whose photometric-effect can be apparent even in low-resolution images. We employ the `crater-roughness'…
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