Mystery of dwarf planet's 'lonely mountain' has been solved

Scientists have come up with a mind-bending explanation for the origin of a strange, streaked mountain on the dwarf planet Ceres, a 600-mile-wide body that orbits the sun in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.

The huge peak, Ahuna Mons, formed when a blob of salty, rocky mud from deep within Ceres broke through the icy crust and froze, according to a study published June 10 in the journal Nature Geoscience.

The research adds to evidence that Ceres is geologically active, with a cratered surface shaped in part by eruptions not of molten rock — as on Earth — but of liquid water. This so-called cryovolcanism has been observed on several bodies within the solar system and was first observed on Neptune’s moon Triton.

With a summit that lies 4,000 to 5,000 meters (13,000 to 16,000 feet) above the surface, Ahuna Mons is Ceres’ tallest mountain. It was discovered in 2015, when NASA’s now-defunct Ceres-orbiting Dawn spacecraft beamed back images of the dwarf planet’s surface.

The isolated peak’s size and smooth contours — which are starkly different from the dwarf planet’s generally pockmarked appearance — caused a stir among scientists.

“My first reaction was, this is amazing,” study co-author Wladimir Neumann, a planetary scientist at the DLR Institute for Planetary Research in Berlin-Adlershof, said of the unusual mountain. “The second was, this is something I never saw before in reality or in any pictures.”

source: nbcnews.com