Before you take out the tissue, remember: astronomy is in itself a "black hole" until the practitioner devotes his life to science. I am talking about levels of Galileo devotion, which is equivalent to someone spending every penny of their life in a research container. If it does not concern you directly, the problem of the loss of Pluto's atmospheric bubble may not be too discouraging. In the current state of things, scientists predict the collapse of the planet, once in 11 years.

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An academic journal named Astronomy and astrophysics Leads the charge in "watching the planet" as I like to call it. It has been said for years: Pluto did not deserve its designation in the Solar System, so astronomers began to call it a "dwarf planet", before the periodical A and A and D & # 39; Other competing philosophers are beginning to make their feelings known in the press. .

"What the study has revealed is when Pluto is farthest away from the Sun and during its winter in the Northern Hemisphere, nitrogen freezes from the atmosphere," wrote Andrew Cole. author of the study that monitors the end of the planet. "The atmospheric pressure has tripled over the last three decades, but as the planet was in orbit, our modeling showed that most of the atmosphere would condense almost completely."

At the heart of Andrew Cole, who wrote to lovers of the planet around the world, the researcher published a date of expiration of 2030, 11 years later, for the complete collapse and total of Pluto's atmospheric bubble. It is interesting to note that if Pluto is in a difficult period as expected, Earthmen will have more ease with their telescope, avoiding that its frost disappears into the abyss.

[Via]