"Charon and Pluto, two corpses staring at each other, exchanging atoms in perfect silence."
Cosmicus and Orbitalus: For nearly a century, Pluto has been the forgotten world at the edge of our solar system. A frozen smudge. A demoted planet. A curiosity. But when the James Webb Space Telescope finally turned its infrared eye toward this distant ice world, what it revealed wasn't just surprising. It was deeply unsettling.
In this video, we break down what James Webb actually saw on Pluto, and why scientists are reconsidering everything they thought they knew about this distant world. From a surface chemistry that shouldn't exist at those temperatures, to atmospheric behavior that defies our models, to hints of activity beneath the ice that no one was prepared for, Pluto is turning out to be far stranger, and far more alive, than the dead rock we imagined.
We'll explore: What the James Webb Space Telescope detected on Pluto's surface Why the new data contradicts decades of assumptions The haunting implications for the outer solar system What this means for the search for hidden worlds beyond Neptune Why Pluto may be the most misunderstood object we've ever studied
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