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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Flooded rocks on Titan
Tuesday, 11 May 2010 21:26
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| Solar system - Saturn |
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It appears flash flooding has paved streambeds in the Xanadu region of Saturn's moon Titan, where the ESA Huygens landed, with thousands of sparkling crystal balls of ice
By analyzing the way the terrain has scattered radar beams, scientists deduce the spheres measure at least a few centimeters and maybe up to a couple of meters in diameter. The spheres likely originated as part of water-ice bedrock in higher terrain in Xanadu. The process on Titan, however, involves rain made of liquid methane and ethane, rather than Earth's water rain. Titan's rocks are believed to be made primarily of water ice frozen into a hard mass about -180 degrees Celsius, rather than Earth's mineral rocks.
Earth-like river rocks have already been observed on Titan at the landing site of the European Space Agency's Huygens probe, near the equator in the borderland between the Adiri and Shangri-la regions. The landing site also showed signs of flash flooding that deposited cobblestones about 2-20cm in diameter. Source: JPL/NASA |




