SATURN DAILY SPACE DAILY TERRA DAILY MARS DAILY MOON DAILY SPACE TRAVEL SPACE WAR ENERGY DAILY
  Saturn News  
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
  
Search All Our Sites at SpaceBank
Cassini Radar Images Show Dramatic Shoreline On Titan

Radar image of Titan showing that the boundary of the bright (rough) region and the dark (smooth) region appears to be a shoreline. See larger image. Image credit: NASA/JPL.

Pasadena CA (JPL) Sep 19, 2005
Images returned during Cassini's recent flyby of Titan show captivating evidence of what appears to be a large shoreline cutting across the smoggy moon's southern hemisphere. Hints that this area was once wet, or currently has liquid present, are evident.

"We've been looking for evidence of oceans or seas on Titan for some time. This radar data is among the most telling evidence so far for a shoreline," said Steve Wall, radar deputy team leader from NASA's Jet Propulsion.

The images show what looks like a shoreline dividing a distinct bright and dark region roughly 1,700 kilometers long by 170 kilometers wide (1,060 by 106 miles). Directly to the right of a bright and possibly rough area is one that is very dark and smooth.

"This is the area where liquid or a wet surface has most likely been present, now or in the recent past, said Wall. "Titan probably has episodic periods of rainfall or massive seepages of liquid from the ground."

The brightness patterns in the dark area indicate that it may once have been flooded with liquid that may now have partially receded. Bay-like features also lead scientists to speculate that the bright-dark boundary is most likely a shoreline.

"We also see a network of channels that run across the bright terrain, indicating that fluids, probably liquid hydrocarbons, have flowed across this region," said Dr. Ellen Stofan, Cassini associate radar team member from Proxemy Research, Laytonsville, Md.

Taken together with the two other radar passes in October 2004 and February 2005, these very high resolution images have identified at least two distinct types of drainage and channel formation on Titan.

Some channels in images from this pass are long and deep, with angular patterns and few tributaries, suggesting that fluids flow over great distances. By contrast, others show channels that form a denser network that might indicate rainfall.

Dr. Larry Soderblom with the U.S. Geological Survey in Flagstaff, Ariz., said, "It looks as though fluid flowed in these channels, cutting deeply into the icy crust of Titan. Some of the channels extend over 100 kilometers (60 miles). Some of them may have been fed by springs, while others are more complicated networks that were likely filled by rainfall."

Titan has an environment somewhat similar to that of Earth before biological activity forever altered the composition of Earth's atmosphere. The major difference on Titan, however, is the absence of liquid water, and Titan's very low temperature. With a thick, nitrogen-rich atmosphere, Titan was until recently presumed to hold large seas or oceans of liquid methane. Cassini has been in orbit around Saturn for a year and has found no evidence for these large seas.

Cassini encountered an anomaly with one of two solid-state recorders during the Sept. 7 close flyby, resulting in some data not being recorded. Half of the data from the flyby was received, much to the delight of anxious scientists. The spacecraft team is troubleshooting the cause, and early indications point to a software problem that would be correctable with no long-term impacts.

This was Cassini's eighth out of 45 Titan flybys planned in the nominal four-year tour. The next radar pass will be Oct. 26 when the team will focus on the Huygens probe landing site close to the equator.

Related Links
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express

Ghostly Spokes In Saturn's Rings Spotted By Cassini
Boulder CO (SPX) Sep 19, 2005
Delighted scientists on the Cassini imaging team will be breaking out the champagne in celebration of the first Cassini sighting of spokes, the ghostly radial markings discovered in Saturn's rings by NASA's Voyager spacecraft 25 years ago.






Memory Foam Mattress Review

Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar News
  • Santa et al
  • Hubble Makes Movie Of Neptune's Dynamic Atmosphere
  • Gemini Samples Spectrum Of 2003 UB313: Pluto-Like Surface
  • Scientists Discover Tenth Planet

  • Spirit Finds New Rock Type; Opportunity Hastens Towards Erebus
  • Testing Command Communications With Spirit
  • Deciphering Mars: The Current Decade
  • The Two Moons Of Mars As Seen From Mars



  • Messenger Assembly Under Way Messenger Project
  • Messenger's Propulsion System Is a Go
  • A Mercurial Message Of Hot Data

  • Computer Simulation Suggests Mechanisms The Drive Jovian Jet Streams
  • The Lure Of Europa
  • NASA Selects New Frontiers Mission Concept Study
  • Icy Jupiter Moon Throws A Curve Ball At Formation Theories

  • Sun Has Binary Partner, May Affect The Earth
  • Cultivating a Planetary Garden: How Long Does it Take?
  • Cultivating a Planetary Garden: How Long Does It Take?
  • Rapid-Born Planets Present 'Baby Picture' Of Our Early Solar System

  • US Plans New Moon Landing In 2018
  • An Alpine landscape On The Moon
  • Indian Scientists Studying Technologies For Manned Moon Mission
  • Lunar Probe Program Facing Three Major Difficulties

  • Orbimage Announces Agreement To Purchase Assets Of Space Imaging
  • Envisat Sensors Measuring Heat And Light
  • Testing, Testing: CryoSat Radar At Work In Baltic
  • NASA Satellites Will Reveal Secrets Of Clouds And Aerosols

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement