Skip to page main content
NASA Logo - Astrobiology Magazine - earth science - evolution distribution Origin of life universe - life beyond: Astrobiology is study of earth science evolution distribution Origin of life in universe terrestrial + Astrobiology Portal
+ NASA Home
FIND IT @ NASA
NASA HomepageAstrobiology Magazine - earth science - evolution distribution Origin of life universe - life beyond: Astrobiology is study of earth science evolution distribution Origin of life in universe terrestrial
Home Science and Research Datasets and Images Publications Multimedia
News flash!
Astrobio.net is getting a makeover!
Click here to submit your Poll
Great Debates
Benefits_of_Hard_Bodies

Benefits of Hard Bodies
Main Menu
· Home
· Subscribe
· Archive
· Random Page
· All Topics
· Europe

Features
· Great Debates
· Table Talk
· Expeditions
· Perspectives
· Chronicles
· Espanol

Hot Topics
· Titan
· Europa
· Moon to Mars
· Terrestrial Origins
· Climate
· Extreme Life
· Mars Life
· Outer Planets
· Meteors & Comets
· New Planets
· Extrasolar Life
· Stellar Evolution

Image Galleries
· Studio
· Panoramas
· Terrafirma Now

Find-It
· Monthlies
· Advanced Search
· Syndication
· Spread the Word
· About
Today's Story
Today's most read story is:
Life Falling Back to Earth
 
Alien Thunder
Titan Summary (Oct 22, 2004): Set to descend into Titan's atmosphere after Christmas, the Huygens probe carries a microphone for recording any stormy weather it may encounter. In the silence of space, the role of sound is unexplored territory for solar system probes. Titan may offer the first chance for a terrifying symphony of alien thunder.

Display Options: Send this story to a friend Printer friendly page FAX this story to a friend View and print article in PDF format Save this article in Word Doc format Excel Worksheet Save this article in PalmDoc format Syndicate this story in XML Access this article in wireless format via cellphone Save to Desktop - Windows Espanol - Machine translated Postscript Print-Ready Audio MP3 - Machine Text-to-Speech Larger font Smaller font


Saturn system showing Titan and Huygens descent

Alien Thunder

based on ESA report

huygens_detail
Huygens' probe will enter Titan's thick atmosphere and may record alien thunder on its microphone.
Credit: ESA

The sound of alien thunder, the patter of methane rain and the crunch (or splash) of a landing, all might be heard as Huygens descends to the surface of Titan on 14 January 2005.

What's more, they will be recorded by a microphone on the probe and relayed back so that everyone on Earth can hear the sounds of Titan. Although the Russians took a microphone to Venus in the 1970s, few scientific results came out of that endeavour. A similar microphone for Mars was destroyed when NASA's Mars Polar Lander crashed a few years ago.

saturn_huygens
Titan descent by Huygens probe leaving Cassini storage, Christmas 2004. ESA has tested the parachute system on Earth. Image Credit: ESA

The new microphone is part of the Huygens Atmospheric Structure Instrument (HASI), one of six multi-functional experiments carried on the Huygens probe. It is designed to help track down lightning by listening for the clap of thunder usually associated with such an event.

Although there is only a small chance that the spacecraft will pass near a thunderstorm, it is an extremely important investigation to carry out. It may help us to understand if thunderstorms are an important energy source for organic chemistry on Titan.

saturn_huygens
Titan during flyby showing distinct bright/dark regionsImage Credit: NASA/ESA

This may hold clues about how life began on Earth. Titan's atmosphere is laced with chemicals and many scientists think these are the same as those that formed the building blocks of life on Earth, 4000 million years ago. But how did they join together on Earth to ultimately become DNA?

One possibility is that sudden discharges of energy, as occur in lightning, could have forced the simple chemicals together, making more complicated ones. So Huygens will listen for thunder and 'sniff' for chemicals that might have been produced in lightning strikes.

In fact, a second microphone experiment can also be found on Huygens. It is part of the Surface Science Package (SSP) and contributes to an experiment to measure the speed of sound in Titan's atmosphere.

These results present an exciting possibility because if the HASI microphone does hear thunder, electrodes on the same instrument will register the lightning's electrical discharge and scientists will be able to calculate how close Huygens passed to the storm.

If Huygens actually passes through a storm, the microphone will detect the splash of the rain onto the spacecraft casing. Unlike on Earth, this rain will not be water but probably liquid methane.

Marcello Fulchignoni, of the Universitè Denis Diderot, Paris, is the principal investigator of HASI. He says, "Combined with the camera images, temperature and pressure profiles, and altitude data, the 'soundtrack' will provide a fascinating look at the details of the mission's descent. We will be working hard to bring the voice of Huygens to the public as soon as we can after the descent."

Related Web Pages

Cassini
Saturn Edition, Astrobiology Magaz.
Saturn's Rings in UV
Cassini Closes In on Saturn

Saturn-- JPL Cassini Main Page
Lord of the Rings
Space Science Institute, Imaging Team Boulder, Colorado
Saturn: The Closest Pass

Note: Life and Giant Planets
Display Options: Send this story to a friend Printer friendly page FAX this story to a friend View and print article in PDF format Save this article in Word Doc format Excel Worksheet Save this article in PalmDoc format Syndicate this story in XML Access this article in wireless format via cellphone Save to Desktop - Windows Espanol - Machine translated Postscript Print-Ready Audio MP3 - Machine Text-to-Speech Larger font Smaller font

Friday, October 22, 2004
Alien Thunder | Login/Create an account | Comments
Threshold
Comments are owned by the poster. We aren't responsible for their content.
 
Credits Feedback Related Links Sitemap
FIRST GOV + Privacy, Security, Notices
+ Syndication Help
+ RSS Syndication
+ NASA Ames Astrobiology Portal net
Home Page + Chief Editor & Executive Producer: Helen Matsos
+ Site & Server Maintenance : Turbo Inc.