Astronomy / Space Volcanoes of Mud Erupt From Dwarf Planet Ceres

The largest object in the asteroid belt is an active world unlike any other in the solar system.





Nothing is normal on Ceres — least of all its mud volcanoes.

In new research published in Nature Astronomy, a large team of astronomers has laid out a new view of the weirdest world in our solar system. It seems that Ceres has had a busy last few billion years — including random smatterings of volcanism, but of a type seen nowhere else in the solar system.

http://astronomy.com/news/2018/09/volcanoes-of-mud-erupt-from-dwarf-planet-ceres
 
Another reference on the same topic:

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Every year throughout its 4.5-billion-year life, ice volcanoes on the dwarf planet Ceres generate enough material on average to fill a movie theater, according to a new study led by the University of Arizona.

The study, led by UA planetary scientist Michael Sori, marks the first time a rate of cryovolcanic activity has been calculated from observations, and its findings help solve a mystery about Ceres's missing mountains.

Read more at: https://phys.org/news/2018-09-ceres-life-ice-volcano.html#jCp
 
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