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European Craft on Saturn Moon Finds Tantalizing Signs of Liquid
NY Times ^ | January 15, 2005 | JOHN NOBLE WILFORD

Posted on 01/14/2005 7:16:29 PM PST by neverdem

DARMSTADT, Germany, Jan. 14 - A European spacecraft plunged through the murky atmosphere of Saturn's moon Titan on Friday and successfully came to rest on a bizarre landscape never before explored.

Astronomers expressed joy at achieving the first landing on another planet's moon, particularly Titan, the only moon in the solar system with substantial atmosphere.

"We clearly have a success," said Dr. Jean-Jacques Dordain, director general of the European Space Agency. "This is a fantastic success for Europe."

The first pictures from the spacecraft, Huygens, did nothing to undermine the reputation of Titan as a strange place. One showed what appeared to be deep channels leading to the shoreline of a dark, flat surface, possibly a lake of liquid methane.

"Clearly there is liquid matter flowing on the surface of Titan," said Dr. Martin G. Tomasko of the University of Arizona, an imaging specialist for the mission. That possibility has tantalized scientists, who say Titan may resemble Earth early in its development and could give clues to the origin of life here.

Another picture evoked the rocky landscape of Mars, although astronomers said the boulders were probably ice. The black-and-white pictures, taken as Huygens descended, were a foretaste of more highly processed color pictures that are expected to be made public on Saturday, Dr. Tomasko said.

The photos capped an eventful direct encounter with a mysterious moon. Through the day, officials of the European Space Agency moved from anxiety as the probe approached the Titan atmosphere, to relief when a radio signal hinted that all was well, and finally to elation at the arrival of data analyzing the moon's complex hydrocarbon chemistry and of pictures of the world beneath the enveloping smog.

At 5:13 p.m. local time (11:13 a.m. Eastern time), cheers went up here at the European Space Operations Center as the engineering and scientific data arrived, a seal of mission success.

Although the Huygens spacecraft was part of the $3.2 billion Cassini mission to Saturn in partnership with the United States, the Europeans saw it as a particularly challenging engineering endeavor that could elevate their reputation as major players in space technology. The American-built Cassini spacecraft may have delivered Huygens to the threshold of its achievement, but a spacecraft built in Europe and directed here became the first to land on the moon of another planet.

It is a feat that, as Dr. David Southwood, the space agency's director of science programs, said, is "not likely to be repeated in the lifetime of anyone alive today - so this is a really historic event."

From the early evidence of radio signals and the first data, Huygens entered the dense atmosphere on time, about 11:13 a.m., and on target, with all science instruments gathering observations all the way down. The landing apparently occurred about 1:30 p.m. But the craft's radio signal persisted well after the point when, engineers had predicted, its batteries would die.

Dr. Jean-Pierre Lebreton, the Huygens mission manager, was surprised by the persistence of the signal for more than five hours, the first clear indication that the craft had landed intact. These signals were more like a simple dial tone than a message of scientific data.

The nature of the landing site was not immediately known. But a scientist said that the long-lived radio signal could rule out a touchdown in the lakes of methane and ethane that have been hypothesized, because the craft might have sunk in liquid. So Huygens, scientists said, may have set down on a solid plane of ice or a stretch of gooey tars.

Nor is it clear exactly where the craft touched down. The target was a broad region in the moon's southern hemisphere. An instrument clocking wind speeds, scientists said, may show that the spacecraft was swept off course by dozens of miles.

Preparations for the Cassini mission began in 1981 as a comprehensive exploration of Saturn, known for its beautiful rings and its family of more than 30 satellites, notably Titan, a body larger than the planets Mercury or Pluto. The mission, following up on the tantalizing discoveries of the Voyager spacecraft that flew by for brief looks, is planned to last at least four years, but the plunge into Titan's atmosphere was likely to be its most daring endeavor.

The 700-pound saucer-shaped landing probe was named for the 17th-century Dutch astronomer Christiaan Huygens, who discovered Titan. The seven-ton Cassini carried the smaller craft piggyback over the seven-year journey to become the first spacecraft to orbit Saturn, starting last summer. In December, Cassini released Huygens for the solo cruise of 2.5 million miles to Titan.

For 22 days, Huygens traveled in silence to conserve battery power. Three onboard clocks kept time to enable a programmed command to wake up the craft. Its instruments and communications system were checked out just before entry into Titan's upper atmosphere, about 1,200 miles above the surface.

Meanwhile, the Cassini spacecraft moved into position, more than 40,000 miles away, to receive Huygens's radioed messages of discovery and relay them to tracking antennas on Earth. Cassini then stored the data in four identical copies.

As Huygens entered the atmosphere, its computer set off all the subsequent critical moves. Dr. Claudio Sollazzo, the mission operations manager, said, "Things are supposed to go one after another, like clockwork." And so they apparently did. The reception of the first radio signal by a giant antenna in Green Bank, W.Va., indicated that the spacecraft had entered the atmosphere and continued downward. Subsequent signals reassured flight controllers of a successful landing, through a sequence of parachute releases and the separations of protective covers that exposed science instruments for observations.

The six primary instruments are to measure temperatures, pressures and the composition of the nitrogen-rich atmosphere, with its complex hydrocarbon chemistry, which appears to some scientists to be "prebiotic." But actual life is unlikely to be found on Titan, whose temperature is 292 degrees below zero Fahrenheit.

In October, Cassini's radar and visible-light cameras took pictures of the moon's surface, but dense haze kept scientists puzzled as to whether Huygens would find a landscape of ice, frozen tar or lakes of liquid methane and ethane. Dr. John Zarnecki of the Open University in England said his research team favored a surface of gooey gum on top of ice as the best bet.

The challenge now is for scientists to take the results of one ride through Titan's atmosphere - "this grand descent into the unknown," in Dr. Southwood's words - and pictures of its surface and see if the moon is, as often speculated, a time machine of planetary life. Is its hydrocarbon chemistry indeed similar to conditions that may well have existed on Earth in the early solar system? If so, what does that reveal about the chemistry of the origin of life?

For the time being, the Huygens team put scientific interpretation aside and enjoyed a triumph that was a long time coming.

"You can probably detect a certain relief on my face," Dr. Southwood said, and he was not alone in the control rooms at Darmstadt.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Germany; Government; News/Current Events; Technical; US: Arizona; US: District of Columbia; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: cassini; huygens; saturn; titan
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To: nuke rocketeer

I guess smell depends on what kind of methane you're talking about and who or what's producing it.


21 posted on 01/14/2005 8:16:49 PM PST by dc-zoo
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To: waynebobo

Welcome to FR


22 posted on 01/14/2005 8:16:51 PM PST by Fiddlstix (This Tagline for sale. (Presented by TagLines R US))
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To: Congressman Billybob; nuke rocketeer
I thought methane was a biologic product.

Not necessarily. On Earth methane does persist in the atmosphere due to the oxidizing atmosphere. So any methane in the Earth's atmosphere is fairly recent (less than a few thousand years) and most likely of biological origin. The atmosphere of Titan is reducing, so the methane probably dates to the formation of the solar system 4.5 billion year ago. It is thought that the Earth originally had a reducing atmosphere, but photosynthetic algae over billions of years gradually released enough oxygen to cause it to be oxidizing.

23 posted on 01/14/2005 8:17:15 PM PST by Paleo Conservative (Hey! Hey! Ho! Ho! Dan Rather's got to go!)
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To: Texas Eagle
Oh, great. Here we go. The Space Cadets will start lobbying for trillions of taxpayer dollars to explore Saturn's moon.

LOL. I agree.

I'd rather we just gaze at the stars as our half naked forebears did, and remain ignorant of this troublesome space-knowledge.

There isn't enough knowledge on earth to complicate human existence--they have to go flying around the universe for more?

I'd rather we worship the sun and moon as gods, making the usual animal sacrifices to them.

(I am not being a wise-guy; I'm serious.)

24 posted on 01/14/2005 8:29:32 PM PST by Age of Reason
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To: dc-zoo
Yes.. liquid methane.

Oh Boy LNG. Now we just need some giant space tankers and we've solved all our fuel requirements for the next two million years. And we don't even have to liquify it!

25 posted on 01/14/2005 8:35:31 PM PST by Timocrat (I Emanate on your Auras and Penumbras Mr Blackmun)
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To: Batrachian
I say it's Titan Rover time, in spite of what that Euroweenie says.

May as well toss our hat in the ring too.

26 posted on 01/14/2005 8:40:49 PM PST by Ken H
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To: Paleo Conservative

The fact that Titan has a hydrocarbon atmosphere should point out the obvious to everyone here: Hydrocarbons (i.e. petrochemicals) DO NOT come from "fossils". They are geochemical in nature, not dependent upon former biological activity. Earth is going to continue making oil, as long as the tectonic plates continue to subduct, and as long as we have a molten core.

To continue to charge exorbitant prices for a product because "we're going to run out of it someday" is now rendered total bullshit. Let's see the price reflect reality now, and one less piece of the sky is falling.


27 posted on 01/14/2005 8:42:59 PM PST by datura (Destroy The UN, the MSM, and China. The rest will fall into line once we get rid of these.)
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To: Paleo Conservative
Thank you. I have just enough chemistry and physics to understand what you have just explained.

Billybob
28 posted on 01/14/2005 8:43:10 PM PST by Congressman Billybob (Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.)
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To: Central Scrutiniser

They're also talking about blimps. They can stay up for months, or that's the idea, at least.


29 posted on 01/14/2005 9:21:25 PM PST by Batrachian
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To: Age of Reason

"Did Galileo pray?"


30 posted on 01/14/2005 9:21:58 PM PST by steve dubya
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To: neverdem

Incredible!


31 posted on 01/14/2005 9:26:22 PM PST by Frank_2001
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To: neverdem
Well dahhhhhhhhhhhh!

Looks like a river bed with all the ROUNDED rocks lying around. Now what could possibly round out all those boulders.

Liquid substance? Naaaaaaaaaaaah!
32 posted on 01/14/2005 9:29:43 PM PST by Puckster
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To: Paleo Conservative

You sound like the one to ask, but I thought I heard the liquid that would be there would be ETHANE. Did I hear wrong?


33 posted on 01/14/2005 9:30:28 PM PST by CarolAnn (If we aren't supposed to shoot animals, then why did God make them out of meat?)
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To: CarolAnn

Nope, you didn't hear wrong. Any liquid present would likely be Ethane according to Huygens project scientists.


34 posted on 01/14/2005 9:31:34 PM PST by Strategerist
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To: Strategerist

Thank you! I was just beginning to understand what all the project scientsts were talking about. That doesn't happen very often with me, so I can go back to being pleased with myself. ?:}


35 posted on 01/14/2005 9:35:53 PM PST by CarolAnn (If we aren't supposed to shoot animals, then why did God make them out of meat?)
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To: neverdem
awesome!

I've often thought that one of the greatest scenes possible would be a view of Saturn in the night sky of one of it's moons.

I wonder if they could or would attempt it?

As it is...these pictures are breathtaking!

Thanks for the post.

36 posted on 01/14/2005 9:39:30 PM PST by mitch5501 (by the grace of God,I am what I am)
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To: Puckster

It almost looks likes there's liquid flowing by those rocks - but the resolution is poor.


37 posted on 01/14/2005 9:41:43 PM PST by Fitzcarraldo
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To: Fitzcarraldo

Considering the resolution.............EVERYTHING is rounded.

Resolution can't hide that.

Just suggestion thaT SOMETHING liquid rounded out EVERYTHING!


38 posted on 01/14/2005 9:44:24 PM PST by Puckster
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To: Puckster

I get the feeling these are low-resolution first look data products - they are keeping the full data close to the vest until the next press con.


39 posted on 01/14/2005 9:46:37 PM PST by Fitzcarraldo
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To: Congressman Billybob

Does this mean there are cows on Titan?


40 posted on 01/14/2005 9:56:29 PM PST by Mad_Tom_Rackham
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