Storm Clouds on Titan
Now they're becoming weather forecasters as well. This week two teams of researchers announced that a series of storm clouds have been seen moving through Titan's south polar region. Led by Michael E. Brown (Caltech) and Henry G. Roe (University of California, Berkeley), the teams independently tracked the clouds last December and February using two of astronomy's biggest guns: the 10-meter Keck II and 8-meter Gillett (Gemini North) telescopes on Mauna Kea, Hawaii. Their results appear in the December 19th issue of Nature and December 20th's Astronomical Journal, respectively.
Thanks to adaptive-optics technology, which counteracts much of the image-distorting turbulence created by Earth's atmosphere, the newly released images of Titan have roughly twice the detail of previous views. Spectroscopic studies had hinted that Titan's atmosphere was alive with storm activity, but the new views reveal the clouds' movement and evolution directly. Images taken by Roe's team show changes in the bright polar clouds over just a few hours. "The biggest question had been how frequently the clouds formed and how long they lasted," explains Antonin H. Bouchez, a member of Brown's team. "Now we see that they're always there."
Scientists have been puzzled by Titan's murky atmosphere ever since Voyager 1 swept by at close range in 1980 and failed to see any surface detail. They hope to fare better when the Cassini spacecraft reaches the ringed planet in two years. The Saturn orbiter is equipped with an infrared imager, radar sounder, and electromagnetic sensors. Even better, the European-built Huygens probe will record a wealth of data during its two-hour plunge through Titan's atmosphere.





