Wild, Weird Titan Reveals More Secrets
Early this morning scientists from the European Space Agency (ESA) held a press conference in Paris to describe the latest findings they have teased out of the data from ESA's Huygens probe. On January 14th, Huygens parachuted through Titan's thick, cloudy atmosphere to a soft landing on a muddy, pebbly floodplain overlooked by icy headlands. The mission succeeded beyond all expectations, with Huygens continuing to transmit for several hours before succumbing to Titan's extreme cold.
"We have lots of evidence for many familiar Earth-like processes of precipitation and erosion and abrasion," summed up Martin G. Tomasko, principal investigator for the Descent Imager-Spectral Radiometer "Earth-like processes, if you like, but with very exotic material on this new world."
The weirdness stems from Titan's frigid temperature, which is not far above absolute zero (it was 93°K, 180°C, or 291°F at the landing site), and from an atmospheric chemistry that's almost a mirror image of Earth's. While Earth has an oxidizing atmosphere and very little fuel for our oxygen to burn, Titan has a reducing atmosphere that's loaded with fuel methane, familiar to us as natural gas but no oxygen.
The similarity stems from the fact that the temperature is so cold that methane cycles between gas and liquid the same way water does on Earth. So Titan has a "troposphere" with eerily familiar weather: white stormclouds that rain liquified natural gas, which runs off the land in rivers to flow out onto vast, smooth floodplains, where it soaks into the ground and evaporates back to the atmosphere.
Huygens was "extraordinarily lucky," Tomasko said, to descend so close to a border between the bright and dark regions seen from space. Stereo images of the bright headland reveal a ridgeline as much as 100 meters high in a frame 1 kilometer wide, for an average slope of 10 percent (which would be considered a dangerous slope for a road on Earth). But the grade is far from smooth. The uplands are cut almost everywhere by channels with dark-stained bottoms. Tomasko said that rainfall apparently washes dark material off the Titanian "bedrock" which consists of permanently frozen water ice, not rock and deposits it on the channel bottoms and the plain.
ESA scientists term the landing site "muddy." A probe on the bottom of the lander found the soil to be uniformly soft, like wet sand, under a thin crust on top. The lander itself settled about 10 or 15 centimeters (4 or 6 inches) into this material, and the lander's warmth apparently evaporated liquid permeating the soil; sensors detected exhalations of methane gas a few minutes after touchdown.
The rounded "pebbles" on the ground at the lander are probably dirty water ice, shaped by flowing liquid just like pebbles of rock that are rolled in rivers and waves on Earth. On a larger scale, low elevations on the plain appear to have been sculpted by flowing liquid. Dark ovals, said Tomasko, are "pools where the last of the liquid dried up, we think."
Radar has not shown the open seas that planetologists had hoped to find. The hydrology at the site, said Owen, seems more like that of the Arizona desert, "where riverbeds are dry most of the time and the rain sinks below the surface" except that the "groundwater" under Huygens is just a few centimeters rather than many meters down.
From an ultimate dim Thule
A wild, weird clime that lieth, sublime,
Out of SPACE out of TIME.
Edgar Allan Poe, 'Dreamland,' 1844





