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Review: Leatherstocking Golf Course (Part 1)

Most people who visit Cooperstown, New York, are going to see the National Baseball Hall of Fame. It is the obvious reason to visit the town...

Wednesday, March 23, 2016

Pluto: The Saga Continues

Yes, it's time for another installment of big Pluto news. New Horizons is still sending back data, and will be for several months. As that data comes in, we learn more and more about this surprisingly complex little world. A group of five studies was recently published in the journal Science about Pluto, so let's take a look at what scientists have learned.

The first piece of news is that Pluto's surface has a lot of variation in which type of ice is dominant. There are areas which are mostly methane ice, areas which are mostly nitrogen ice, and areas which are mostly water ice. Nitrogen ice is dominant in the flat, craterless plains, while water ice is dominant in the mountainous regions, reflecting their characteristics at the very cold temperature Pluto sits at. Water ice is very rigid and behaves almost like rock does on Earth, while nitrogen ice is much less tough and is able to flow, much like our glaciers on Earth. Indeed, this sort of distinct differentiation in material most closely resembles Earth, where the surface is separated by areas dominated by water and by rock.

Another study focuses on the geology of Pluto, especially Sputnik Planum, the vast, nitrogen ice dominated region in the southern hemisphere. The plain is located on an ancient impact crater, and its smooth, craterless surface contrasts sharply to areas with a heavy crater density scientists were likely expecting all over Pluto, and to areas with an intermediate crater density. Small bodies like Pluto should have frozen solid all the way through billions of years ago, but something is causing Sputnik Planum and much of the surface to refresh itself, though what that mechanism is remains unknown. The same study also demonstrates that Cthulhu Regio is covered in tholins, an organic molecule that has turned the area a deep red. The tholins likely drifted down from the atmosphere and the mountains Wright Mons and Piccard Mons. These are big mountains, Wright Mons is 2.5 miles high and Piccard Mons is 3.7 miles high, and likely formed through cryovolcanism.

Pluto's atmosphere was the focus of a third study. It's a bit less interesting, but it turns out that the Plutonian atmosphere is significantly colder than what was predicted before New Horizons' visit. Because of this, the particles of the upper atmosphere are much less energetic, which in turn means the atmosphere is losing gas at a much slower rate than what was anticipated. Initial estimates were off by about a factor of 5,000.

Don't worry, Pluto's five moons weren't forgotten in all this new research. Pluto's biggest moon Charon is actually quite a bit different from Pluto, and closer in line to what scientists were expecting. There is some very dramatic topography, but on the whole, Charon is a dead world, and has been for about 4 billion years. Its surface is mostly water ice, and is lacking significant amounts of methane and nitrogen ice like Pluto has. Why this is the case is unclear. An additional study examined the 4 smaller moons, which are much more reflective than more typical Kuiper Belt objects, and move very chaotically. This bolsters the theory that the moons are bits of debris that were thrown off in an enormous collision early on in Pluto's history, and the 4 moons are survivors that have managed to escape being sucked up by either Pluto or Charon.

Credit: NASA/John Hopkins University Applied Physics
 Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute
In news unrelated to the Science studies, scientists recently announced that as recently as 800,000 years ago, Pluto likely had a much thicker atmosphere, more substantial than even Mars. Right now, the Plutonian atmosphere has a pressure about 1/100,000 that of Earth's, and this is likely what it usually is. However, Pluto has a axial tilt of about 120 degrees, and as the planet's tilt slowly undergoes procession, there are certain times when the amount of solar radiation in areas with lots of volatile ices goes up dramatically. The resulting outgassing would thicken the atmosphere so that the pressure would increase to about a tenth of Earth's. This is significantly thicker than the Martian atmosphere, and potentially thick enough to allow liquid nitrogen to flow freely on the surface. A thicker atmosphere with liquid nitrogen streams and ponds would explain a series of unusual surface features, such as empty channels similar to those seen on Mars, and a flat, icy area that resembles a frozen pond. The possibility of a thick atmosphere and the existence of a nitrogen cycle similar to Earth's water cycle, even if temporary and limited, on such a tiny, cold world seems pretty far-fetched, but ever since New Horizons flew by, Pluto has surprised us. This batch of new science has made Pluto that much more interesting.

It's still not a planet though.

Thursday, March 17, 2016

The Grand Slam of Golf is No More

Yes, one of the stalwarts of the old Silly Season is going away forever. The Grand Slam of Golf, a 36 hole event that ostensibly featured the major winners of the previous year, had been around since 1979, outdating even the Skins Game. Like all of the other Silly Season events, it was a decidedly unserious affair, so I won't pretend this is a great loss. Ever since the PGA Tour started doing the Fed-Ex Cup and the emergence of late season, big money European Tour events in China and the Middle East, the Silly Season has become, well, silly. It just isn't necessary anymore, not when a bunch of rich international tycoons are willing to pay out millions for the big names.

In 2013, the PGA Tour decided that the seasons, rather than being contained within a calendar year, would be wrapped around in a similar fashion to the European Tour, which I'm not sure ever takes a break. This, the Tour hoped, would add some relevance to the often ignored Fall Series, a group of official events that often felt more like Nationwide Tour events (is that what it's called now? It's been through so many names). But it also made Silly Season events that much more unnecessary. Still, the Grand Slam continued through 2014. Then it was decided that in 2015, the Grand Slam would move to Trump National LA. Now, if you've been paying attention to the news, or have been a resident of planet Earth, you might realize why it might not be a great idea for the PGA Tour to hold an event on a Donald Trump course. So, the Tour announced after Trump made disparaging remarks about (insert minority here) that they would move the Grand Slam to a new location. Well, plans fell through, and the 2015 event was called off. The Grand Slam was missed by precisely no one, and so, it was cancelled permanently.

Credit: Sean Salamon/Wikimedia Commons/CC by 2.5
Despite all that, judging from the Grand Slams that I saw, it was a nice little event. I don't think I ever remember it having the 4 most recent major winners, but I think it usually did at least have major winners. People you might have heard of, unlike the Golf World Cup, where the U.S representatives seem to get more and more obscure every year. I first remember watching it at the amusingly named Poipu Bay, but I most distinctly remember the 2 years it was at Mid Ocean, in Bermuda. At that time, other than a few modified holes at Waialae Country Club, I don't think the PGA Tour visited a course designed by C.B. Macdonald and Seth Raynor, 2 of the Golden Age's finest architects. Of course, now there's the Greenbrier Classic at the Old White, but when the Grand Slam was at Mid Ocean, that tournament didn't exist. Also, the Old White, while an excellent course, hardly has the reputation that Mid Ocean has. The fifth hole at Mid Ocean, the premier example of the Cape, one of the Macdonald/Raynor staple template holes, is especially notable, but the entire course is beautiful. Also unlike the Old White, Mid Ocean is very private, and basically the only way an ordinary golfer like me would ever get to see it is to see it on TV.

So, here's to the Grand Slam of Golf. You weren't the flashiest tournament, or the best, but for a little while, you gave us all a tour of a golf course with interesting architecture, lots of great scenery, and for that, it's a tournament worth missing.

Friday, March 4, 2016

Good News for Alaska Golfers

Global warming is generally considered not to be a good thing. When it comes to golf, global warming threatens to disrupt rainfall patterns, making it more difficult to keep courses irrigated, and rising sea levels threaten to wash away coastal golf courses, especially the classic links courses of Great Britain. Not even St. Andrews, the home of golf, is immune to increased storms washing away its dunes.

That said, if you're an Alaskan golfer, you'll be very happy this year, because Alaska golf courses are opening earlier than they ever have. Normally, courses in the Anchorage area open in mid-April, but this year, they'll be opening this weekend, easily breaking the record (set last year) of March 21st. It's so unnaturally warm in Alaska this year that the golf courses are actually opening the day before the Iditarod starts. You know, the dogsledding race. The one that takes place in winter. With all the snow. It's been so warm they actually had to ship in snow this year to Anchorage so the race can begin. Come on guys, how absurd do things have to get before we do something really substantial about global warming? It's getting downright comical now.