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Date: 26 Jul 2006 06:27:57
From: Sam Wormley
Subject: Cassini Spies Methane Lakes on Titan
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Cassini Spies Methane Lakes on Titan http://sciencenow.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/2006/725/1 By Richard A. Kerr ScienceNOW Daily News 25 July 2006 Team members poring over data returned last Friday by the Cassini spacecraft believe they now have very strong evidence for methane lakes on Saturn's haze-shrouded moon Titan. When Cassini was launched, planetary scientists expected it would find Titan covered by seas--if not oceans--of methane, ethane, and nitrogen liquefied by the moon's relatively balmy 90° K (-183 °C) temperatures. But those hydrocarbon seas were nowhere to be seen on Cassini's arrival, and Cassini's Huygens lander later touched down on methane-damp water ice rather than splashing into a frigid pool. Yet methane clouds, high methane humidity, and obvious cutting of river valleys in the icy surface spoke of methane cycling on Titan much the way water cycles from lakes and oceans to clouds and rain on Earth. On its latest pass by Titan, Cassini's surface-scanning radar detected places on the surface that fail to reflect any detectable signal back to Cassini, says team member Jonathan Lunine of the University of Arizona, Tucson. That is just the way radar striking a liquid surface would behave. And these "radar-black" areas ranging from 1 or 2 kilometers to 30 kilometers in size meet many other expectations of lakes, says Lunine. The putative shorelines are sharp boundaries between radar-black and radar-gray, and some possible tributaries are radar-black as well. In addition, thermal emissions from radar-black areas suggest they are warmer than their surroundings, as liquids would be. And the lake-like features reside poleward of 70°N, where modeling of Titan weather predicts that rain should be available to fill them; the same sort of topography equatorward of 70°N, where it shouldn't be raining, has no lake-like features. See: http://sciencenow.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/2006/725/1
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Date: 26 Jul 2006 20:05:19
From: Uncle Bob
Subject: Re: Cassini Spies Methane Lakes on Titan
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On Wed, 26 Jul 2006 06:27:57 +0000, Sam Wormley wrote: > Cassini Spies Methane Lakes on Titan > http://sciencenow.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/2006/725/1 > {{{{{{{{{{Snippage for brevity}}}}}}}}}} Whew. And I thought the water in Florida tasted funny. Clear Skies and Good Seeing! Uncle Bob
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Date: 27 Jul 2006 02:35:09
From: John Nichols
Subject: Re: Cassini Spies Methane Lakes on Titan
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"Sam Wormley" <swormley1@mchsi.com > wrote in message news:NXDxg.54059$FQ1.46456@attbi_s71... > Cassini Spies Methane Lakes on Titan > http://sciencenow.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/2006/725/1 > <snippage of great stuff > Cool!
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Date: 26 Jul 2006 22:10:54
From: Dave
Subject: Re: Cassini Spies Methane Lakes on Titan
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I'm not sure I understand what you mean when you describe 'water ice'. Do you mean liquid and solid methane in a kind of slurry, or do you mean H2O ice with liquid methane on the surface of that? Dave
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Date: 26 Jul 2006 15:41:07
From: Bill Owen
Subject: Re: Cassini Spies Methane Lakes on Titan
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Dave wrote: > I'm not sure I understand what you mean when you describe 'water ice'. > Do you mean liquid and solid methane in a kind of slurry, or do you mean H2O > ice with liquid methane on the surface of that? Water ice is frozen water. Methane ice is frozen methane. <Yul Brynner > Et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. </Yul Brynner> Frozen methane apparently behaves enough like frozen water that it's appropriate to call it an "ice." Sort of like the way chemists use "salt" to refer to any ionic compound involving a metal and a halogen, not just NaCl. The original post used the phrase "methane-damp water ice," which would mean a mixture of frozen water and liquid methane. -- Bill Owen
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