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Cassini
Provides New Views of Titan's Land of Lakes and Seas
Thursday, October 11, 2007
This
Cassini false-color mosaic shows all synthetic-aperture
radar images to date of Titan's north polar region.
Credit:
NASA/JPL/USGS
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Cassini's
radar instrument finds lakes in the southern hemisphere of
Titan during the most recent Titan flyby.
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Credit:
NASA/JPL/USGS
Newly assembled radar
images from the Cassini spacecraft provide the best view of the
hydrocarbon lakes and seas on the north pole of Saturn's moon
Titan, while a new radar image reveals that Titan's south polar
region also has lakes.
The southern region images were
beamed back after an Oct. 2 flyby in which a prime goal was the
hunt for lakes at the south pole.
A new mosaic image, created by
stitching together radar images from seven Titan flybys over the
last year and a half, shows a north pole pitted with giant lakes
and seas, at least one of them larger than Lake Superior.
Approximately 60 percent of
Titan's north polar region above 60 degrees latitude has been
mapped by Cassini's radar instrument. About 14 percent of the
mapped region is covered by what scientists interpret as liquid
hydrocarbon lakes.
"This is our version of
mapping Alaska, the northern parts of Canada, Greenland,
Scandinavia and Northern Russia," said Rosaly Lopes, Cassini
radar scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena,
Calif. "It's like mapping these regions of Earth for the
first time."
Lakes and seas are very common
at the high northern latitudes of Titan, which is in winter now.
Scientists say it rains methane and ethane there, filling the
lakes and seas. These liquids also carve meandering rivers and
channels on the moon's surface. Now Cassini is moving into
unknown territory, the south pole of Titan. "We wanted to
see if there are more lakes present there and, sure enough, there
they are, three little lakes smiling back at us. Titan is indeed
the land of lakes and seas," said Lopes. "It will be
interesting to see the differences between the north and south
polar regions."
It is now summer at Titan's
south pole. A season on Titan lasts nearly 7.5 years, one quarter
of a Saturn year, which is 29.5 years long. Monitoring seasonal
change helps scientists understand the processes at work there.
Scientists are making progress
in understanding how the lakes may have formed. On Earth, lakes
fill low spots or are created when the local topography
intersects a groundwater table. Lopes and her colleagues think
that the depressions containing the lakes on Titan may have
formed by volcanism or by a type of erosion (called karstic) of
the surface, leaving a depression where liquids can accumulate.
Karstic lakes are common on Earth. For example in parts of
Minnesota and central Florida there are hundreds of such lakes.
"The lakes we are
observing on Titan appear to be in varying states of fullness,
suggesting their involvement in a complex hydrologic system akin
to Earth's water cycle. This makes Titan unique among the
extra-terrestrial bodies in our solar system," said Alex
Hayes, a graduate student who studies Cassini radar data at the
California Institute of Technology in Pasadena.
"The lakes we have seen so
far vary in size from the smallest observable, approximately 1
square kilometer (0.4 square miles), to greater than 100,000
square kilometers (40,000 square miles), which is slightly larger
than the Great Lakes in the Midwestern U.S.," Hayes said.
"Of the roughly 400 observed lakes, 70 percent of their area
is taken up by large "seas" greater than 26,000 square
kilometers (10,000 square miles)."
Future radar flybys will image
closer to the southern pole and are expected to show more lakes.
The Cassini-Huygens mission is
a cooperative project of NASA, the European Space Agency and the
Italian Space Agency. JPL, a division of the California Institute
of Technology in Pasadena, manages the Cassini-Huygens mission
for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington. The Cassini
orbiter was designed, developed and assembled at JPL. The radar
instrument was built by JPL and the Italian Space Agency, working
with team members from the United States and several European
countries.
Source:
NASA / JPL

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