Titan's Methane Cycle :: 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
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
Saving_Planet_Earth

Saving Planet Earth
Main Menu
Today's Story
Today's most-read story is:

Our Special Solar System
Other Stories
 
Titan's Methane Cycle
Titan Summary (Jul 31, 2006): The detailed exploration of Titan has revealed the presence of bright polar clouds and dry riverbeds. Ricardo Hueso and Agustín Sánchez Lavega propose that the clouds and dry beds are due to giant storms of methane that occur on this satellite of Saturn.

Display Options: Send this story to someone Printer-friendly page _FAX _PDF _RTF _XLS _PALM _XML _WML _S2D _ESP _PS _TTS Larger font Smaller font


Titan's Methane Cycle

based on a Basque Research release

Methane clouds appear where predicted at south pole of Titan.

The detailed exploration of Titan with space missions began a couple of years ago and the presence of bright polar clouds and dry riverbeds on this satellite of Saturn has intrigued astronomers ever since. Doctors Ricardo Hueso and Agustín Sánchez Lavega from the Planetary Sciences Group of the University of the Basque Country (UPV-EHU), based at the Basque Country School of Engineering in Bilbao, have put forward an explanation for the phenomena in the July 2006 edition of Nature. The clouds and dry beds are due to giant storms of methane that occur on Titan. The satellite of Saturn would thus have a methane cycle , probably similar to the Earth s water cycle.

Titan is the largest satellite of the planet Saturn and the second in size of the whole solar system at 5,150 kilometres diameter. It is the only moon in the system with an atmosphere dense in nitrogen, similar to that of the Earth. Titan s atmosphere has a thick orange cloud of hydrocarbons that impede visibility of its surface, which also makes it different from the rest of the satellites. Moreover, given the enormous distance separating it from the Sun - some 1,500 million kilometres - the surface temperatures there are icy at 180ºC below zero, any water on it surface will be completely frozen. However, the pictures taken by the Cassini spaceship, orbiting Saturn since July 2004, and the measurements obtained from the Huygens probe, installed in a satellite launched in January 2005, point to the existence of recently formed canals and dried riverbed structures on the surface of this frozen world. If this is the case, we have the first example in the whole solar system apart from the Earth, that is where we can regularly find surface deposits of liquid. How can flowing structures be formed in such a frozen atmosphere? Are they formed by rains? If so, what kind?

The research published in Nature by Doctors Ricardo Hueso and Agustín Sánchez Lavega and entitled, Methane storms on Saturn s moon, Titan provides an explanation to these questions that intrigue astronomers. According to these Basque Country University scientists, huge clouds of methane vapour form storms on Titan´s surface, this hydrocarbon compound playing a similar role to that of water on Earth. From calculations carried out, these heavy storms, which can reach a vertical height of 35 kilometres above the surface, produce dense clouds of methane and copious precipitation of liquid drops of the gaseous compound, similar to the intense downpours of rain we experience on Earth. The precipitation generates accumulations and rivers of liquid methane on Titan, producing the canals observed.

The descent of the Huygens probe has allowed the first detailed study of the atmosphere of Saturn's moon Titan, revealing startling parallels and stark contrasts with that of Earth. Both atmospheres are nitrogen-dominated, but the low temperature of Titan means that the carbon-carrying gas in its atmosphere is methane (1.6% of the total) rather than carbon dioxide (present at only 345 parts per million). Photochemical reactions involving this methane produce a smog at middle altitudes, and an organic rain of methane and nitrogen-containing aerosols falls steadily onto the satellite's surface, creating an Earth-like terrain of extended river networks. Credit: Nature

The hypothesis formulated by the researchers of the existence of heavy methane storms on Titan is based on the ongoing observations over the last few years from the Cassini craft and by the largest terrestrial telescopes of very localised and bright clouds. One of the most prolific regions where these wide masses of cloud have been found is at the South Pole of the satellite. Despite the low mean temperatures of Titan, the polar region is currently in summer, thus receiving more heat than the rest of the planet and raising the temperature slightly but sufficiently to provide the energy needed to for the stormy episodes. The researchers have found that one of the keys in the development of the storms are the so-called condensation nuclei particles that form the orangey cloud and reach the lower atmosphere of Titan. Methane drops form around these particles and give rise to the storm clouds.

The researchers suggest that the methane, present in small quantities in the atmosphere, play a similar role to that of water on Earth although, to date, they have not yet discovered liquid-state deposits on Saturn s moon. Titan, in this sense, would have a methane cycle , similar perhaps to the Earth s water cycle. In order to confirm their hypothesis of liquid methane formation causing the storms, the UPV/EHU investigators suggest the systematic radar observation with Cassini of the surface in those regions where the formation of the bright white clouds have been observed.

Related Web Pages

Unlocking Titan's Methane
Purple Haze
Saturn-- JPL Cassini Main Page
Titan Weather: Cloudy Every 15 Years
Where is Cassini Now?
Did Fluid Once Flow on Titan?
Is Titan's Bright Spot Hot?
Titan's Icy Volcanoes Erupting Methane?
Titan versus Earth

Note: Titan
Display Options: Send this story to someone Printer-friendly page _FAX _PDF _RTF _XLS _PALM _XML _WML _S2D _ESP _PS _TTS Larger font Smaller font

Monday, July 31, 2006
 
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.