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TOPIC: Titan


L

Posts: 131433
Date:
Huygens probe
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As Huygens parachuted to the surface of Titan in January 2005, a battery of telescopes around the world were watching or listening.

The results of those observations are now being collected together and published for the first time. The work gives valuable additional context within which to interpret the 'ground truth' returned by Huygens.
Hundreds of scientists, working at 25 radio and optical telescopes situated mainly around the Pacific, from where Titan would be visible at the time of Huygens descent, observed the moon before, during and after the Huygens descent. It was one of the largest ground-based observational campaigns ever to take place in support of a space mission.
The first observations began well over a year before Huygens entered the alien world's atmosphere, when scientists used the fact that Titan would pass directly in front of two distant stars. By watching the way the light faded from the stars, scientists analysed the density, wind and temperature of Titan’s atmosphere. It helped to build confidence by confirming that the atmosphere was similar to their expectations.



This image provides a comparison between the Huygens landing site on Titan as viewed by the Cassini Imaging Science Subsystem (ISS) and the NACO/SDI instrument mounted on the 8-metre Yepun telescope of the VLT (Very Large Telescope) station, in Chile.
From the two images it is possible to see a high consistency between the two measurements. The Cassini image - taken in the near-infrared (938 nanometres)- shows the Huygens landing site map wrapped around Titan, rotated to the same position as the January 2005 NACO/SDI observations.
The coloured lines outline the regions that were imaged by Cassini at different resolutions. The lower-resolution imaging sequences are outlined in blue. Other areas have been specifically targeted to build moderate and high resolution mosaics of surface features. These include the site where the Huygens probe has touched down on 14 January 2005, marked with the yellow X, and located at a latitude of 10.3° south and a longitude of 192.32° west (or 167.7° east).
The landing site is located on the boundary between the bright region called Adiri and the dark one called Shangri-la.
The red colour on the NACO/SDI image corresponds to an atmospheric filter at 1.625 micron, while the blue colour corresponds to a filter for the surface at 1.600 and 1.575 micron.

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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
Huygens radio signal
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An unexpected radio reflection from the surface of Titan has allowed ESA scientists to deduce the average size of stones and pebbles close to the Huygens’ landing site. The technique could be used on other lander missions to analyse planetary surfaces for free.

When Huygens came to rest on the surface of Titan on 14 January 2005, it survived the impact and continued to transmit to the Cassini mothership, orbiting above. Part of that radio signal 'leaked' downwards and hit the surface of Titan before being reflected back up to Cassini. On its way up, it interfered with the direct beam.
As Miguel Pérez-Ayúcar, a member of the Huygens Team at ESA’s European Space Research and Technology Centre (ESTEC) in The Netherlands, and his colleagues watched the signal coming back, they were initially puzzled to see the power of the signal rising and falling in a repetitive manner.

"Huygens had not been designed to necessarily survive impact so we had never thought about what the signal would look like from the surface" - Miguel Pérez-Ayúcar.

After making a joke that aliens must be dragging the craft along the surface, Pérez and the team began work at once to understand the signal.



The clue was the repetitive oscillation of the power. It made Pérez think about the interaction of the direct signal with that reflecting from the surface of Titan. As Cassini travelled away from the Huygens landing site, the angle between it and Huygens changed. This altered the way in which the interference between the reflected and direct beams was detected, perhaps causing the variation in power.
He began running computer models and saw that not only could he reproduce the received signal but also it was sensitive to the size of pebbles on the surface of Titan.
Cassini collected data for 71 minutes after Huygens landed. After that time, the spacecraft’s motion took it below the horizon as seen from Huygens' landing site. Until then, it soaked up radio signals that encoded information about a swathe of Titan’s surface from 1 metre to 2 kilometres to the west of the landed probe.
To accurately mirror the true signal, Pérez and his team discovered that the surface swathe must be relatively flat and covered mostly in stones of around 5-10 centimetres in diameter.
This unique result complements the data taken by the Descent Imager and Spectral Radiometer (DISR) instrument. When Huygens came to rest on the surface of Titan, DISR was pointing due south. Its images show stones and terrain in good agreement with the newly deduced western facing radio data.

"This is a real bonus to the mission. It requires no special equipment, just the usual communications subsystem" - Miguel Pérez-Ayúcar.

Now that the scientists have understood the process using the unexpected Huygens data, the technique could be implemented on future lander missions.

"This experience can be inherited by any future lander. All that will be needed is a few refinements and it will become a powerful technique" - Miguel Pérez-Ayúcar.

By subtly altering the properties of the radio beam for instance, the radio transmitter and receiver can be optimised to help deduce the chemical composition of the planetary surface.

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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
Titan (T16)
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The Cassini spacecraft, using its radar system, has discovered very strong evidence for hydrocarbon lakes on Titan. Dark patches, which resemble terrestrial lakes, seem to be sprinkled all over the high latitudes surrounding Titan's north pole.

t16swath
Expand (1.33mb, 2540 x 1800)
Credit NASA/JPL

Scientists have speculated that liquid methane or ethane might form lakes on Titan, particularly near the somewhat colder polar regions. In the images, a variety of dark patches, some with channels leading in or out of them, appear. The channels have a shape that strongly implies they were carved by liquid. Some of the dark patches and connecting channels are completely black, that is, they reflect back essentially no radar signal, and hence must be extremely smooth. In some cases rims can be seen around the dark patches, suggesting deposits that might form as liquid evaporates. The abundant methane in Titan's atmosphere is stable as a liquid under Titan conditions, as is its abundant chemical product, ethane, but liquid water is not. For all these reasons, scientists interpret the dark areas as lakes of liquid methane or ethane, making Titan the only body in the solar system besides Earth known to possess lakes. Because such lakes may wax and wane over time, and winds may alter the roughness of their surfaces. Repeat coverage of these areas should test whether indeed these are bodies of liquid.

These two radar images were acquired by the Cassini radar instrument in synthetic aperture mode on July 21, 2006. The top image centred near 80 degrees north, 92 degrees west measures about 420 kilometres by 150 kilometres. The lower image centred near 78 degrees north, 18 degrees west measures about 475 kilometres by 150 kilometres. Smallest details in this image are about 500 metres across.

-- Edited by Blobrana at 23:06, 2006-07-24

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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
RE: Titan
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This image of Titan was taken by the Cassini space probe on July 22, 2006, when it was approximately 200,417 kilometres away

N00064122
Credit NASA/JPL

The image was taken using the IRP0 and CB3 filters.

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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
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This image of Titan was taken by the Cassini space probe on July 22, 2006, when it was approximately 145,861 kilometres away

W00016419
Credit NASA/JPL

The image was taken using the IRP0 and CB3 filters.



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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
RE: Titan Caves
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The highlands of Titan may be riddled with caves, according to the latest images of Saturn's giant moon.

On 30 April, the Cassini spacecraft flew over a large bright region called Xanadu that spans about 4000 kilometres across.
Xanadu was already thought to be a highland area, where bright hills of ice poke up above Titan's dark sooty plains. A new picture made with the spacecraft's haze-penetrating radar confirms that.
In fact, the interior of the region is crossed by mountain chains that tower more than a kilometre high.

"These are the highest mountains measured on Titan so far" - Ralph Lorenz, radar team member of the University of Arizona in Tucson, US.

But it seems that the mountains are not solid. The radio waves bouncing off Xanadu reveal that it has peculiar electrical properties – specifically a low dielectric constant.

"The only reasonable material makeup that could have a very low dielectric constant and still hold together enough to form the structures that we see would be some sort of porous stuff – most likely porous water ice" - Steve Wall, radar team member of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, US.

He suggests the region might be filled with caverns, presumably carved out by the methane rain that is though to fall on Titan.
That rain would also have created the long river valleys that meander among the hills of Xanadu. Cassini scientists speculate that these rivers could carry ice grains down to the plains to form the dunes seen on much of Titan's surface.
The highlands are also marked by small, dark patches that may be methane lakes – although, as elsewhere on the moon, there is no strong evidence of liquid still present on the surface.
That could change this weekend, when Cassini makes its first pass above the wintry north pole of Titan. The poles are the most likely places for lakes or seas to survive because they are cold enough to prevent any liquid methane on the surface from evaporating quickly.

But what if there are no lakes near the pole?

"If we don't find them there, then I will begin to wonder if they are visible on Titan at all" - Ralph Lorenz.

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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
Xanadu
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A network of river channels is located atop Xanadu, the continent-sized region on Saturn's moon Titan. This radar image was captured by the Cassini Radar Mapper on April 30, 2006.
These winding, meandering river channels start from the top of the image and run like a fork in the road, splitting to the right and left of the image. At Titan's chilly conditions, streams of methane and/or ethane might flow across parts of the region.
The picture is roughly 230 kilometres wide by 340 kilometres long, and shows features as small as 500 metres.


Credit: NASA/JPL

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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
Titan (T13)
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This image of Titan was acquired on April 30, 2006, by Cassini's radar instrument in synthetic-aperture mode over the continent-sized region called Xanadu.


Credit NASA/JPL/Cassini team

Xanadu is one of the brightest areas on Titan, measuring about 4,000 kilometres east to west and 2,000 kilometres north to south. The radar coverage shown ranges from 220 to 490 kilometres from top to bottom, and is about 4,850 kilometres wide. Smallest details in this image are about 400 meters across.

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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
T16
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After revealing a land of mountains and river channels near Titan's equator in April, Cassini's radar will illuminate the high northern reaches of Titan during the next flyby on July 22. In winter's shadow since the arrival of Cassini in 2004, Titan's northern terrain could harbour methane lakes, which shrink in summer and expand in winter.

The T16 flyby is scheduled to have an altitude of only 950km.

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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
RE: Titan
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T7 Radar swath released, from September 7, 2005.

IMAGE

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