When scientists peered through the James Webb Space Telescope, they expected to see more frozen silence — but instead they found methane gas hovering above Makemake’s icy surface. That alone rewrites how we think about distant dwarf planets. This discovery isn’t just a minor tweak to models; it hints that Makemake is still evolving, still “alive” in its own cold way.
The Methane Revelation: A Dynamic Dwarf in the Outer Solar System
The detection of gaseous methane on Makemake transforms it from a frozen relic into a dynamically active world.
JWST observations captured sharp emission peaks near 3.3 microns from sunlight-excited methane above Makemake’s surface, marking the first confirmed volatile release from this dwarf planet. In spectroscopy, emission lines at these wavelengths indicate molecules absorbing sunlight (fluorescence) and re-radiating it. That means methane is not only present in ice form but is also present as a gas. The fact that Makemake is now only the second trans-Neptunian object (after Pluto) to show such a signature underscores how extraordinary this is.
So this discovery elevates Makemake from a quiet ice ball to a world where surface ices and the thin sky may still interact — and that’s a paradigm shift in how we view these distant bodies.
How Scientists Spotted the Gas: Tools, Techniques, and Challenges

The detection hinged on Webb’s infrared spectroscopy and careful modeling to separate ice signals from gas emissions.
The research team used JWST’s NIRSpec instrument to record the spectrum from ~1 to 5 µm, and spectral modeling revealed a combination of surface hydrocarbons plus emission from CH₄ gas. The ice composition included CH₄, CH₃D, and possibly CH₃OH, along with traces of C₂H₂ and C₂H₆. The observed spectrum is a mix: broad absorption bands from ices and narrow emission peaks from gas. Disentangling them requires a model that accounts for layered vs areal distributions, the temperature of the gas, and how sunlight excites the molecules. The team favored a layered model of ice + gas to best match the observations. With that detection in hand, scientists then had to ask: what’s the origin of that gas? Is it a steady atmosphere, or episodic outgassing?
Two Rival Explanations: Thin Atmosphere vs. Plumes
The methane emission can be explained by either a tenuous bound atmosphere or localized plume activity, and each scenario carries distinct implications.
In one model, a bound atmosphere in equilibrium predicts gas temperatures around 40 K and surface pressures near 10 picobars — extremely thin — matching constraints from past stellar occultation observations. In the alternate scenario, researchers estimate methane production rates of (0.2–1.6) × 10²⁸ molecules s⁻¹, or hundreds of kg per second, akin to the scale of plumes seen elsewhere. A bound atmosphere implies that methane sublimates slowly across broad regions, filling a thin vapor shell above the surface that might drift and refreeze. In contrast, plume-based outgassing would require active vents or fractures delivering bursts of gas from the interior. The former is global and steady, the latter localized and possibly variable.
Distinguishing the two is vital, because one suggests stable surface–atmosphere cycling, while the other hints at internal heat and episodic geological processes hidden beneath the ice.
Clues from the Isotopes and Surface Chemistry
Isotopic ratios and complex hydrocarbons on Makemake’s surface strengthen the case for internal processing.
The team measured the D/H (deuterium/hydrogen) ratio in methane ice as (3.98±0.34)×10−4(3.98 \pm 0.34)\times 10^{-4}(3.98±0.34)×10−4. This “intermediate” ratio lies between that seen in water molecules and in comets, which argues against purely primordial methane. The surface composition also shows hydrocarbons (C₂H₆, C₂H₂, possibly C₂H₄), suggesting photochemical processing. If methane were solely primordial (i.e. from the solar nebula), we’d expect a higher D/H signature. The intermediate result suggests that new methane is being produced, or that the original methane has been modified over time. The presence of other hydrocarbons signals that sunlight or cosmic rays are converting methane and processing the surface ices into more complex molecules.
These chemical fingerprints make the idea of internal heat and active resurfacing more compelling than a passive body sitting frozen in the outer reaches.
Why This Discovery Matters: Shaking Up Our View of the Outer Solar System
The presence of methane gas on Makemake forces us to rethink how distant icy bodies evolve and maintain activity.
Makemake is now the only TNO beyond Pluto confirmed to show gas, highlighting that even in the farthest reaches, volatile cycling may still be happening. The finding challenges the idea that Kuiper Belt objects are inert, frozen relics. In our mental model, beyond Neptune lies a cold, quiet realm of frozen rocks and ices. But if Makemake maintains methane activity, even at extremely low pressures, it suggests that volatile exchanges (ice → gas → ice) can persist far from the Sun. It also opens the possibility that other outer bodies (like Eris, Haumea, or others) might harbor similar hidden activity. Some recent studies already suggest dwarf planets repave their surfaces with methane injections.
So this is not just a curiosity — it’s a call to expand how we model planetary evolution in the deep freeze, and to search for more surprises.
What’s Next: How Scientists Will Test the Hypotheses

Future observations and refined models will be needed to settle whether Makemake’s methane comes from an atmosphere or intermittent plumes.
The authors emphasize that higher spectral resolution observations with JWST could resolve line shapes, temperatures, and additional species to distinguish between the two scenarios. They also note that repeated observations could reveal temporal changes in methane brightness, which would favor plume activity. In spectroscopy, gas in a bound atmosphere produces relatively symmetric line profiles and certain thermal broadening. Plume emissions, by contrast, can show Doppler shifts, asymmetric lines, or variability over time. Tracking changes, comparing emission strengths at different seasons or orientations, and detecting companion gases (like CO or nitrogen) could help discriminate models.
Lessons and Broader Impacts: What We Learn from Methane in the Deep Freeze
The methane detection on Makemake teaches us that our outer solar system is more alive—and more complex—than we often assume.
The discovery demonstrates that volatile cycles can persist at extreme distances, that dwarfs can harbor internal heat or active resurfacing, and that chemistry on icy surfaces continues over time. Other studies suggest that similar internal processes are also plausible for Eris and comparable bodies. These lessons push us to think differently about the Kuiper Belt. Rather than a graveyard of frozen leftovers, it may be a frontier of subtle chemical, thermal, and geological interactions. Understanding these processes helps us refine models of solar system formation, internal heating, and volatile behavior under extreme cold.
For general audiences, this means the outer Solar System is not dead — it’s whispering secrets in methane, waiting for us to listen.
Conclusion
Makemake’s methane discovery is more than a footnote in planetary science — it’s a punchy reminder that even the darkest, coldest corners of our system can hide surprises. The idea that a remote dwarf planet, bathed in frigid sunlight, can still host volatile cycles, internal heat, or plume vents is thrilling. It reminds us that exploration and observation still have the power to reshape what we believe about the cosmos.
As telescopes get sharper and missions reach further, maybe we’ll find more “sleeping” worlds with faint breaths of gas, each telling a hidden story about how planets evolve, sustain activity, and interact with their environment — even far from the Sun’s warm embrace. Explore the Cosmos with Us — Join NSN Today



























