Titan
Saturn VI
Titan Facts
- Titan is the fifteenth of Saturn's known satellites
and the largest:
- distance from Saturn: 1,221,830 km
- diameter: 5150 km
- mass: 1.35e23 kg
- In Greek mythology the Titans were a family of giants,
the children of Uranus and Gaea, who sought to rule the
heavens but were overthrown and supplanted by the family of Zeus.
- Discovered by Huygens in 1655.
- It was long thought that Titan was the
largest satellite in
the solar system but recent observations have shown that
Titan's atmosphere is so thick that its solid surface is slightly
smaller than
Ganymede's. Titan is
nevertheless larger in diameter than Mercury
and larger and more massive than Pluto.
- One of the principal objectives of the
Voyager 1 mission was the study of
Titan. Voyager 1 came within 4000 km of the surface. We learned more in the
few minutes of that encounter than in the previous 300 years.
- And yet our knowledge is frustratingly incomplete. Titan is surrounded by a
thick, opaque atmosphere; the surface cannot be seen at all in
visible light (picture 8). (The
Cassini mission will map Titan's
surface with radar as Magellan did at
Venus.) All that the Voyager images show is
a slight variation in color between the northern and southern hemispheres.
Some surface detail is visible in the infrared with HST.
- Titan is similar in bulk properties to
Ganymede, Callisto,
Triton and (probably) Pluto.
- Titan is about half water ice and half rocky material. It is probably
differentiated into several layers with a 3400 km rocky center surrounded by
several layers composed of different crystal forms of ice. Its interior may
still be hot. Though similar in composition to Rhea
and the rest of Saturn's moons, it is denser because
it is so large that its gravity compresses its interior.
- Alone of all the satellites in the solar system, Titan has a significant
atmosphere.
At the surface, its pressure is more than 1.5 bar (50% higher than
Earth's).
It is composed primarily of molecular nitrogen (as is
Earth's) with no more than 6% argon and a
few percent methane. Interestingly, there are also trace amounts of at least
a dozen other organic compounds
(i.e. ethane, hydrogen cyanide, carbon dioxide).
The organics are
formed as methane, which dominates in Titan's upper atmosphere, is destroyed by
sunlight. The result is similar to the smog found over large cities,
but much thicker.
In many ways, this is similar to the conditions on Earth early in its history
when life was first getting started.
- Titan has no magnetic field and sometimes orbits outside
Saturn's
magnetosphere. It is therefore directly
exposed to the solar wind. This may ionize
and carry away some molecules from the top of the atmosphere.
- At the surface, Titan's temperature is about 94 K (-290 F). At this temperature
water ice does not sublimate
and the water at the surface cannot participate
in the chemistry of the atmosphere. Nevertheless, there appears to be a lot
of chemistry going on; the end result seems to be a lot
like a very thick smog.
- There are probably two layers of clouds at about 200 and 300 km above the
surface. Other more complex chemicals in small
quantities must be responsible for the orange color as seen from space.
- It seems likely that the ethane clouds
would produce a rain of liquid ethane onto the surface perhaps producing an
"ocean" of ethane (or an ethane/methane mixture)
up to 1000 meters deep. Recent ground-based radar
observations have cast this into doubt, however.
- Recent observations with the
Hubble Space Telescope
show remarkable near infrared views of Titan's surface
(picture 1, above).
Voyager's camera couldn't see through Titan's atmosphere
but in the near infrared the haze
becomes more transparent, and HST's pictures suggest that a huge bright
"continent" exists on the hemisphere of Titan that faces forward in its
orbit. These Hubble results don't prove that liquid "seas" exist,
however, only that Titan has large bright and dark regions on its surface.
The landing site for the
Huygens probe has been chosen in part
by examining these images. It will be just "offshore" of the largest
"continent" at 18.1 degrees North, 208.7 degrees longitude
(picture 9).
- The observations by HST also indicate that Titan's rotation is in fact
synchronous like most of Saturn's other moons.
Pictures
- (above) A view of the "four faces of Titan"
125k gif;
36k jpg
(caption)
- Titan color composite from Voyager 2 at 4.5 million km
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looking back at Titan
29k gif;
41k gif;
6k jpg
- Titan, moon of Saturn, showing cloud bands
159k gif
B&W HST image centered at longitude 315
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- another B&W HST image
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Mercator projection of Titan
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Titan in visible light from Voyager
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- Huygens landing site
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- COME-ON+ image (ground-based adaptive optics)
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Movies
- Animation constructed from HST IR pics
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More about Titan
Open Issues
- Are there liquids on the surface?
- Is the interior still hot?
- Why does Titan have a dense atmosphere while the other large moons do not?
- There are a lot of organic compounds and a potentially liquid environment
on Titan. It is extremely cold for life, but could it be possible?
Titan is one of the best possibilities.
In any
case, it's interesting as a comparison with the early environment on Earth.
- The Cassini radar mapper and
Huygens probe will provide the hard data so frustratingly lacking
on this enigmatic moon (if it survives its passage through the US
Congress).
... Saturn
... Rhea
... Titan
... Hyperion
...
Bill Arnett; last updated:
1995 July 12