News on Saturn
- The small Saturn-moon Phoebe looks more like a failed planet than a moon
- The origin and age of Titans atmosphere
- Saturns constantly changing F-ring
- Lakes on Titan is like a Namibia mudflat
- Historic clase-encounter with Saturn-moon Tethys
- Measurments of Saturns Aurora and magnetic field
- Saturn streches teh surface on its moon Enceladus
- New amazing images of ice-moon Rhea
- Discovery of thin oxygen atmosphere around Dione
- Titans changing wheather
- Cassini's closest Dione flyby
- The vast sand-dune plains on Titan
- The making of Saturns rings
- The shepparding moons
- Is Titans climate stable?
- Now model explains Titans lakes and storms
- Bad wheather on saturn-moon Titan
- Saturn moon may affect planet's magnetosphere
- Alignment of Saturnian moons
- Cassini only 99km over Saturn-moon Dione
- Cassiini to make 2 close moon-flybys in 1 day
- New higher resolution images of Saturn-moon Enceladus
- Saturns interplanetary dust-storm
- Satirns giant storm has lasted 200 days
- Comets gave Titan atmosphere
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A giant arrow-shaped cloud on Saturn-moon Titan
Wednesday, 17 August 2011 11:31
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| Solar system - Saturn |
![]() Why does Titan, Saturn's largest moon, have what looks like an enormous white arrow about the size of Texas on its surface? A research has answered this question by using a global circulation model of Titan to demonstrate how planetary-scale atmospheric waves affect the moon's weather patterns. The study was led by Jonathan L. Mitchell, UCLA assistant professor: "These atmospheric waves are somewhat like the natural, resonant vibration of a wine glass," Mitchell said. "Individual clouds might 'ring the bell,' so to speak, and once the ringing starts, the clouds have to respond to that vibration."
The fascinating clouds, including arrow-shaped ones, that result from the atmospheric waves can cause intense precipitation - sometimes more than 20x Titan's average seasonal rainfall - and could be essential in shaping Titan's surface by erosion. The research was published Aug. 14 in the online edition of the journal Nature Geoscience and will be published in an upcoming print edition.
Mitchell and a colleague have described Titan's climate as "all-tropics" — the entire planet experiences the types of weather phenomena that on Earth are confined to the equatorial region.
"Our new results demonstrate the power of this analogy, not only for general features of Titan's climate but also for individual storms," Mitchell said. "In future work, we plan to extend our analysis to other Titan observations and make predictions of what clouds might be observed during the upcoming season. Titan's all-tropics climate gives us the opportunity to study tropical weather in a simpler setting than on Earth. Our hope is that this may help us understand Earth's weather in a changing climate."
NASA's Cassini Spacecraft has been in orbit around Saturn since late 2004 and has revolutionized our understanding of Titan, which is larger in volume than the planet Mercury and the second largest moon in the solar system after Jupiter's Ganymede. Titan has a thick nitrogen atmosphere and experiences rain made of natural methane gas. "Titan is like Earth's strange sibling — the only other rocky body in the solar system that currently experiences rain," Mitchell said. Titan is an alien world, but strangely not so different from Earth. Like Earth, the main component of its atmosphere is molecular nitrogen. Water, too, is abundant on Titan, although it is all frozen in the crust at very low temperatures. Methane is thermodynamically active in the lower atmosphere, and much like water vapor on Earth, Titan's methane forms clouds, precipitates and is resupplied from surface sources, Mitchell said. The runoff then weathers the cold surface of Titan, creating what appears to be river patterns. Scientists think that Earth, shortly after it formed an atmosphere, had large amounts of methane and very little oxygen. Methane provided an important greenhouse warming that probably prevented Earth from staying perpetually in a completely frozen state that otherwise would have resulted from the weaker sunlight from the very young sun. "Therefore, by studying Titan's modern climate, we may gain new insights about the way the early Earth's climate was," Mitchell said.
He and his research group have developed an atmospheric model to study the climate and cloud patterns of Titan. Source: UCLA |




