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Pluto may have captured its moon Charon with a brief kiss

Simulations suggest Pluto and its largest moon may have gently stuck together for a few hours before Charon settled into a stable orbit around the dwarf planet

By Alex Wilkins

6 January 2025

Pluto (right) and its moon Charon, photographed by NASA’s New Horizons probe in 2015

NASA/JHUAPL/SwRI

Pluto and its moon Charon may have been briefly locked together in a cosmic 鈥渒iss鈥, before the dwarf planet released the smaller body and recaptured it in its orbit.

Charon is the largest of Pluto鈥檚 five moons, with a radius more than half that of Pluto itself,聽but the question of how it came to orbit Pluto has puzzled astronomers.

One prominent theory suggests that Charon formed after a vast object smashed into Pluto, spewing debris into space that later formed Charon, similar to how scientists think Earth鈥檚 moon formed. But Charon鈥檚 large size and close orbit, at eight times wider than Pluto itself, make this a challenging scenario to explain.

Now, at the University of Arizona and her colleagues have proposed that Charon may have a less destructive origin story, which they describe as a 鈥渒iss and capture鈥.

Previous simulations have treated Pluto and Charon as fluids 鈥 an assumption that works when modelling collisions between larger bodies. But recent research has shown that with objects of lighter mass than Earth鈥檚 moon, the material strength of their composition influences the outcome. 鈥淧luto and Charon are quite small, so the assumption that they are fluid bodies probably no longer applies,鈥 says Denton.

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The researchers ran simulations that take into account Pluto and Charon鈥檚 compositions of rock and ice, and found that a more likely scenario involved a gentle sticking together and parting ways.

Their model showed that a proto-Charon may have penetrated a proto-Pluto鈥檚 icy shell and the two bodies would have spun together rapidly for around 10 hours. Eventually, the spinning flung Charon back out and it settled into Pluto鈥檚 orbit.

鈥淚 had always assumed that any collision between planetary bodies that were hundreds of kilometres across would destroy the smaller one, if captured,鈥 says at the Open University, UK.

While the kiss-and-capture scenario is interesting, says Rothery, it will need to also explain the complex geological features seen on both Pluto and Charon, such as heavily cratered surfaces and icy volcanism, which it doesn鈥檛 currently.

Journal reference:

Nature Geoscience

Topics:

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