8 research outputs found

    Titan's cold case files - Outstanding questions after Cassini-Huygens

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    Abstract The entry of the Cassini-Huygens spacecraft into orbit around Saturn in July 2004 marked the start of a golden era in the exploration of Titan, Saturn's giant moon. During the Prime Mission (2004–2008), ground-breaking discoveries were made by the Cassini orbiter including the equatorial dune fields (flyby T3, 2005), northern lakes and seas (T16, 2006), and the large positive and negative ions (T16 & T18, 2006), to name a few. In 2005 the Huygens probe descended through Titan's atmosphere, taking the first close-up pictures of the surface, including large networks of dendritic channels leading to a dried-up seabed, and also obtaining detailed profiles of temperature and gas composition during the atmospheric descent. The discoveries continued through the Equinox Mission (2008–2010) and Solstice Mission (2010–2017) totaling 127 targeted flybys of Titan in all. Now at the end of the mission, we are able to look back on the high-level scientific questions from the start of the mission, and assess the progress that has been made towards answering these. At the same time, new scientific questions regarding Titan have emerged from the discoveries that have been made. In this paper we review a cross-section of important scientific questions that remain partially or completely unanswered, ranging from Titan's deep interior to the exosphere. Our intention is to help formulate the science goals for the next generation of planetary missions to Titan, and to stimulate new experimental, observational and theoretical investigations in the interim

    The fate of aerosols on the surface of Titan.

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    International audienceA laboratory study based on the chemical transformation that Titan's aerosol analogues suffer when placed under putative surface conditions of the satellite was performed. In order to understand the role that aqueous ammonia may play on the chemical transformation of atmospheric aerosols once they reach the surface, we synthesized laboratory analogues of Titan's aerosols from an N2 : CH4 (98 : 2) mixture irradiated at low temperatures under a continuous flow regime by a cold plasma discharge of 180 W. The analogues were recovered, partitioned in several 10.0 mg samples and placed inside different ammonia concentrations during 10 weeks at temperatures as low as those reported for Titan's surface. After a derivatization process performed to the aerosols' refractory phase with MTBSTFA in DMF, the products were identified and quantified using a GC-MS system. We found derived residues related to amino acids as well as urea. The simplest amino acids aminoethanoic acid (glycine) and 2-aminopropanoic acid (alanine) as well as diaminomethanal (urea), are found regardless of the ammonia concentration and temperature value to which the aerosol analogues were exposed. Our results have important astrobiological implications to Titan's environment particularly if the existence of the suggested subsurface water-ammonia mixture and its deposition on the satellite's surface is validated

    Characterization of the white ovals on Jupiter extquotesingles southern hemisphere using the first data by the Juno/JIRAM instrument

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    Throughout the first orbit of the NASA Juno mission around Jupiter, the Jupiter InfraRed Auroral Mapper (JIRAM) targeted the northern and southern polar regions several times. The analyses of the acquired images and spectra confirmed a significant presence of methane (CH 4 ) near both poles through its 3.3 \u3bcm emission overlapping the H 3+ auroral feature at 3.31 \u3bcm. Neither acetylene (C 2 H 2 ) nor ethane (C 2 H 6 ) have been observed so far. The analysis method, developed for the retrieval of H 3+ temperature and abundances and applied to the JIRAM-measured spectra, has enabled an estimate of the effective temperature for methane peak emission and the distribution of its spectral contribution in the polar regions. The enhanced methane inside the auroral oval regions in the two hemispheres at different longitude suggests an excitation mechanism driven by energized particle precipitation from the magnetosphere

    Titan's cold case files - Outstanding questions after Cassini-Huygens

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    The Emergence of Life

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