Posted on 01/21/2005 7:17:19 AM PST by Dallas59
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Saturn's moon Titan is covered by "dirty" ice ridges and seas of liquid natural gas, a team of scientists said on Friday after a week of research into data from the space probe Huygens.
"We've got a flammable world," said Toby Owen, an atmospheric scientist, at a news conference from European Space Agency offices in Paris monitored on NASA (news - web sites) TV.
After a seven-year piggyback trip from Earth on board the Saturn probe Cassini, the European-designed Huygens separated in December and fell toward Titan, entering the moon's atmosphere last Friday.
The probe, part of a $3 billion joint mission involving NASA and the European and Italian space agencies, sent back readings on the moon's atmosphere, composition and landscape.
Slowed by parachutes, Huygens took more than two hours to float to the icy surface, where it defied expectations of a quick death and continued to transmit for hours.
That surface, which scientists have said was the consistency of wet sand or even creme brulee, features ice rocks, channels, and abundant indications of liquid from rain.
"There's lots of evidence of fluid flow," said Marty Tomasko, the principal investigator for Huygens' on-board imaging instruments. While it does not rain every day on Titan, Tomasko and colleagues speculated there must be some sort of regular precipitation on the surface.
The methane can exist in liquid form on Titan's surface because it is so cold, -290 degrees Fahrenheit (-179 degrees Celsius). Methane is also a key component in Titan's atmosphere, along with nitrogen. But as opposed to the Earth, the atmosphere of Titan lacks oxygen, which is essential to fire.
"There's no source of oxygen available, which is a good thing or Titan would have exploded a long time ago," Owen said.
YEARS OF STUDY
Though the mission teams collected just a few hours' worth of data, they expect to spend years analyzing it for clues as to how Titan formed, how it works and what it can say about the Earth's own development.
Titan is larger than the planet Mercury and, because of its atmosphere, a popular setting for science-fiction tales of human colonization and exploration.
And while manned missions are not necessarily on the horizon, researchers are already talking about what they might do next with Titan, if they had enough money to launch a mission that could probe the solid surface more actively.
"This is highly possible, we can now dream seriously of sending rovers to Titan," said Jean-Pierre Lebreton, the Huygens mission manager for the ESA.
Before that, though, the researchers -- some of whom have worked on the project for the better part of two decades -- will probably catch up on their rest.
"Some of the scientists did not sleep for days and nights, so we are a bit tired I must say," Lebreton said.
The Cassini-Huygens mission to study Saturn's rings and moons was launched in 1997 and is named after two 17th-century European astronomers: Christiaan Huygens, who discovered Saturn's rings and Titan, and Jean-Dominique Cassini, who discovered the planet's other four major moons.
Sounds like an ideal future refueling point for extrasolar exploration.
If it's liquid, how is it gas?
"There's no source of oxygen available, which is a good thing or Titan would have exploded a long time ago," Owen said.
Chalk off another place people will never go.
As has been pointed out in previous threads, the bad odor of natural gas is artificial; it's mercaptan that is deliberately added to it so leaks are quickly smelled.
Actually remember seeing this cable documentary about a natural-gas heated school that blew up in Texas and killed a lot of kids, the smell was added after that.
And the smell in farts isn't from methane either..it's mostly hydrogen sulfide.
There are LNG terminals all over the world. "Liquid Natural Gas."
bttt
Wished it was closer to Earth. Might be a sort of a "gold rush".
Sounds like they are describing Michael Moore's stomach...
Is that like 'jumbo shrimp,' then?
"Natural gas" is a term covering methane, ethane and other compounds, which are most often (on Earth, anyway) found is gas form.
This is what happens when a fashion writer covers a tech story.
Is that an actual picture?
Probably not an ideal venue for a "Palestinian" state then.
So.... If we reshape the orbit of an ice comet... providing the "O", and torch off a 1 megaton nuke, how long would Titan burn?
That's an artist's conception, no doubt.
Heh; to a degree I guess.
Should make for an interseting liftoff.
Same as LNG. Put that way by lowered temps for easier transportation. Thaw it, gas again.
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