Planetary News: Cassini-Huygens (2005)
Titan: Arizona in an Icebox?
By Emily Lakdawalla
January 21, 2005
A mosaic of three frames from the Huygens Descent Imager Spectral Radiometer
shows the surprising channels observed on Titan's surface during Huygens' descent.
Credit: ESA / NASA / JPL / University of Arizona
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A week after Huygens' descent, the emerging picture of the surface of that
smoggy world is of an arid, icy desert, where periodic storms of methane
rain create transient rivers that wash sooty soil from icy highlands out to
short-lived pools and lakes. The pools dry up -- perhaps sinking into a sandy
soil of glass-like water ice -- and the Titanian desert waits for another
methane storm.
The picture is strangely similar to the climate in Arizona,
where Huygens' camera was built, a fact that was not lost on the camera's principal
investigator, Martin Tomasko of the University of Arizona. "The region
that we landed in is typical of arid regions on the Earth," he said in
a press conference held in Paris this morning. "We see no evidence that
there is any liquid in any of these features right now, but we see evidence
of streams, rivers, and rainfall. There is lots of evidence for many familiar
Earth-like processes, like rainfall, and erosion, but with very exotic materials
on this new world."
Actually, the materials are quite familiar ones -- water, natural gas, and
smog particles -- but under Titan's temperature conditions they behave
in quite unfamiliar ways. Like the Arizona desert, the Huygens landing site
has steep hills, arroyos or dry gullies choked with sediment, and dry flat
valleys where liquid pools. But these features are made of very different
materials on Titan. Where Arizona's hills are made of silicate rocks, Huygens'
hills are made of "frozen hard water ice," Tomasko said. The hills
are fairly steep, with heights varying some 100 meters (330 feet) over a span
of a kilometer (0.6 mile), and they exert topographic control over the
pattern of the drainage visible in the Huygens images.
The icy hills are much brighter than the flat plains, which are actually
brighter than the bottoms of the drainage channels visible in the Huygens
images. Tomasko proposed the following explanation for these differences in
brightness. "We think it’s evidence of rain. Photochemical smog
falls out of the atmosphere, and coats the whole terrain." When it rains,
the smog particles coating the surface "get preferentially washed off
the tops of the ridges, so there is a concentration of these organic [smog]
materials in the bottoms of these channels." The plains, where the channels
emptied, is floored by material that was eroded from the icy highlands; the
surface is "sandy" and "rocky," but the sand isn't the
silicate sand we Earthlings are used to, it is "crushed dirty ice." The
dirty outwash from the channels emptied into these ice-sandy plains and sank
in, according to Tomasko's explanation.
Panorama of the channels at the Huygens landing site
This raw image is an oblique view of the same region visible in
the bird's-eye view above. The foreground is a smooth dark plain,
but near the middle of the image fairly steep hills rise out of the
plains. Credit: ESA / NASA / University of Arizona |
How often does this scenario play out on Titan's surface? Tomasko was careful
to point out that Huygens was only one mission at one time at one spot on
Titan, so "we don't have a long enough time series to know what is typical." It
wasn't raining when Huygens descended, and it wasn't wet when she landed,
but whether this is the usual state for Titan's surface is an open question,
one that may take another, longer-lived, and even mobile Titan surface mission
to answer.
The Rain in the Plains is Mainly Methane
One statement that the Huygens science team was prepared to make with certainty
is that the liquid responsible for all these Earth-like features is methane.
There are several other hydrocarbon species that are present in Titan's atmosphere,
including ethane and acetylene, and small differences in pressure and temperature
conditions could have made some of these other substances more important on
Titan's surface. But Cassini atmospheric scientist Toby Owen, of the University
of Hawaii, announced that Huygens has positively identified methane as the
culprit liquid on the surface of Titan. In fact, he said, there is liquid
methane just below the surface at the Huygens landing site right now.
Owen explained that the abundance of methane in Titan's atmosphere was closely
observed using Huygens' Gas Chromatograph Mass Spectrometer (GCMS). This instrument
performed direct measurements of the composition and even isotopic ratios
of the constituents of Titan's atmosphere from an altitude of 170 kilometers
(106 miles) all the way down to the surface. Once again, the Huygens instrument
observed a pattern that was strikingly similar to what would have been seen
on the Earth.
"In the upper atmosphere, nitrogen is the dominant gas," Owen said. "But
when we get into the lower atmosphere, things change," and methane becomes
much more abundant. "This is just like what happens on the Earth with
water vapor. Up in the stratosphere, there is very little water. The reason
is that there is a very low temperature point, a 'cold trap,' that forces
the water to stay down below." Switching back to Titan, Owen continued. "Because
of the cold trap [in the stratosphere], the methane increases more rapidly
than the nitrogen as you go into the lower atmosphere."
Huygens' long lifetime on the surface -- 72 minutes -- permitted the GCMS
to make another astonishing observation. "When you come to the surface," Owen
said, "you would expect everything to be stable, and the nitrogen is.
However, [after the landing], the methane suddenly jumps up by about 30 percent,
boom! In 3 minutes. That methane must be coming out of the ground. That's
really exciting! It means there must be liquid methane right at the surface.
This isn’t Mars, where the stuff that has done the erosion is buried
200 meters underground, as a solid. This is a planet where the liquids are
right there. It might’ve rained yesterday. This is a very active situation.
Methane is really there in the liquid state. It's quite extraordinary."
A Surface Science Experiment
Huygens mosaic: 800 meters altitude
This mosaic is made from 17 of the highest-resolution views of Huygens' landing
site. During the final part of the descent, Huygens stopped capturing images,
and never got a high-resolution image of the point at which it touched down.
That point is marked with the white cross at the center of this mosaic. The
science team interpreted the chain of white features to be high-standing
hills in the plains, around which liquid methane once flowed, carving the
gaps between the hills into stream-lines and leaving darker deposits at the
bottoms of the channels. Credit: ESA / NASA / JPL / University of Arizona
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The GCMS wasn't the only instrument that noticed things happening following
the landing. The Surface Science Package (SSP) did as well. John Zarnecki,
the principal investigator for the SSP, stated that his team had to "go
back to the laboratory" to come up with a material whose mechanical properties
matched what was observed by the SSP penetrometer as it impacted the surface.
The penetrometer is essentially a spring-loaded stick extending out of the
bottom of the Huygens probe, and was the first piece of the probe to hit the
ground. The penetrometer met a little bit of resistance at the beginning,
but then sank fairly freely into the surface; in fact, Zarnecki reported,
the entire probe "probably nestled 10 to 15 centimeters [4 to 6 inches]
into the top layer of the soil."
The best match that the SSP team could come up with for the soil at the Huygens
landing site was a simulant made of tiny glass particles, with a layer of
solid glassy material on the top. The actual Titanian soil would not be made
of glass, but instead of water ice particles, which would behave quite a bit
like glass at Titan's frigid surface temperature of - 179°C (-290°F).
The "nestling" of the probe into the Titanian surface, coupled
with Huygens' surprisingly long life, created an unexpected additional experiment,
Zarnecki explained. "Of course Huygens was still operating. It’s
generating heat, so there is a heated inlet [the port for the Aerosol Collector
Pyrolyser instrument] in close proximity to the surface; Marty [Tomasko]’s
camera has a spotlight, a 20-Watt bulb -- the whole probe is passing heat
into the soil. The methane is evaporating and percolating up through this
sandy-like soil, then a few minutes after the landing the mass spectrometer
is getting a whiff. Our instrument is also getting tantalizing indications
of some turbulence, some material coming up to the surface."
Looking Ahead
Guess at the location of the Huygens landing site
This map shows the approximate location of the Huygens landing site on a base map of Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer images of the surface of Titan.
Credit: NASA / JPL / University of Arizona / USGS
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On the whole, the Huygens science team couldn't be more pleased with the
performance of the probe and the happy chance that gave them such a great
landing site. "We were extraordinarily lucky to come down on a boundary
between the bright material and the dark material that was seen in the Cassini
images," Tomasko said. Owen echoed the sentiment, saying "we were
fortunate to land in the organic goo," where the GCMS could make valuable
measurements even after the landing. And although it appears to have been
fairly easy for the science team to understand the broad picture of the processes
that shaped Huygens' landing site, there are many questions that will keep
the team busy for months or even years to come.
One such question has to do with the composition of the atmosphere as observed
by Huygens. Owen explained that Huygens successfully detected argon, a noble
gas, in Titan's atmosphere, confirming a measurement made by the Ion and Neutral
Mass Spectrometer aboard Cassini. But all of the argon was one isotope, argon-40,
which is produced through the radioactive decay of the potassium-40 that was
included in Titan's rocky core when it formed. Other isotopes of argon, along
with other noble gases like krypton and xenon -- which should have been present
in Titan's primordial atmosphere when the moon first formed -- are completely
absent, down to the sensitivity of the GCMS instrument. "We find these
noble gases in our atmosphere, on Venus, and on Jupiter, but we cannot find
them on Titan," Owen said. "Surely there’s an interesting
clue there as to how Titan formed, which we’ll be working on."
The scientists were careful to emphasize that although the Huygens data set
is probably as rich as they could conceivably have hoped for, it still has
its limitations. In the end, Huygens lasted only three and a half hours, and
she landed in only one place. There's no way that this one mission will be
able to answer all the questions about the four-and-a-half-billion-year history
of the entire world of Titan. "This is one single place on a very interesting
world that is very different from what we know," Owen said. "I
think it’s important to remember the exploration of Mars; our first
three spacecraft passed over the most boring place on Mars; no volcanoes and
no channels. They were talking about canceling the Mars program because it
was so boring. So it’s important not to generalize too much" about
what Huygens saw on Titan.
Indeed, the scientists are already looking ahead to possible future missions.
The most important aspect of a future Titan mission, according to Huygens
project scientist Jean-Pierre Lebreton, would be "mobility." The
most effective way to do this on Titan is with "a floating machine," he
said. (Titan, with its low gravity and thick but not too thick atmosphere,
is the most flight-friendly body in the solar system.) But Lebreton laughed
as he added that he had just had a phone call from the Mars Exploration Rover
team, who "now are dreaming of sending their rovers on the surface of
Titan. From what we have seen of the surface, this is now highly possible:
we can dream of sending rovers on Titan." Perhaps Huygens' most lasting
contribution to the study of Titan will be as a pathfinder, showing that sending
a long-lived, mobile spacecraft to Titan's surface would be a worthwhile endeavor.
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