Posted on 10/25/2004 9:32:25 AM PDT by cogitator
It's big, it's gaseous, it's single band.
I understand that Kerry has a plan to solve that problem...
Kerry is campaigning, there? How many EVs does Titan have?
C'mon...we're talking about Titan, not Michael Moore.
; )
Strange new worlds........
Nice picture. Thanks! Maybe we'll see a shot more in focus in the coming days.
I thought it was Ted Kennedy being described.
Just playing with the fallacy of triple shifting referent.
Difficult to focus on gas clouds!
That shot IS in focus! Titan's surface features are obscured/blurred by the atmosphere. And the surface might be even have hydrocarbon "oceans"; if so, this marks the first time that a satellite is viewing another celestial body with a surface that is partially covered by liquid.
NASA TV coverage begins Oct. 26 at 6:30 p.m. (PST).
See you there.
Oh, then why do we get clear shots of the Earth?
They have to keep snapping pictures so they can try to distinguish between surface features (which would move around at a defined speed with the moon's rotation) as opposed to clouds, whose movement wouldn't be coupled to the rotation speed.
You probably know that, but others reading this thread might not.
Or Elizabeth Edwards
Looks like a big hot-house.
Given the timing of the flyby (and the transmission time between Saturn and Earth), I think I'm going to catch the morning news show coverage.
Good question -- the answer is that Earth's atmosphere is clearer than Titan's. From what astronomers/planetary scientists have figured out thus far about Titan, the atmosphere is partially composed of a liquid hydrocarbon, and other stuff like ammonia, "fog". The reason is that the moon is so cold that gases like methane and ethane are near their condensation point. It's not completely opaque, but it's pretty thick.
" Titan's thick cloudy atmosphere is mostly nitrogen, like Earth's, but contains much higher percentages of "smog-like" chemicals such as methane and ethane. The smog may be so thick that it actually rains "gasoline-like" liquids."
I.e., don't light a match!
Where are the sirens?
NOTE: Nit-Picky Engineer Mode ON...
> The reason is that the moon is so cold that gases like methane and ethane are near their condensation point.
Actually... The reason that methane and ethane are near their condensation point is because the moon is so cold.
>I.e., don't light a match!
Light a match all you want. Titan has little to no free oxygen, thus, there'd be no combustion.
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