Rain On Saturn's Titan 69
BradeRunna writes: "Space.com has a very interesting article describing earth-like weather (even rain) on Saturn's moon, Titan. Especially of note as the surface temperatures hover around minus 288 degrees Fahrenheit. Guess we'll have to wait until the Cassini spacecraft makes it out there in Summer 2004 to get the full skinny ..." A sidebar to the article is a cute comparison between Earth's weather and Titan's.
More little pointless songs, (Score:1)
It's raining methane, halleluja.
Re:Weather on Titan... (Score:1)
Throw in some livestock and you wouldn't be able to tell the difference.
Where do you think all the methane came from in the first place?
Re:Weather on Titan... (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:I believe I can fly. (Score:2)
Since methane stinks, you'd probably notice the leak pretty quickly, and be able to hold your breath until the leak was fixed. Since methane isn't poisonous for us, we might only keep the helmet oxygenated and fill the rest of the suit with warmed up methane. The smaller the area you need to protect against leaks, the easier, and the helmet has the excellent property of not having any moving parts.
Re:I believe I can fly. (Score:2)
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Cute Comparison (Score:1)
Maybye I'm missing something, but it seems to me that evaporation and condensation have to be at equilibruim in order to produce a long-lasting weather cycle.
It doesn't seem logical to list either one as a primary cause of a weather cycle as they are two sides of the same coin.
Re:I believe I can fly. (Score:1)
There has to be free oxygen and a lot hotter for it to ignite.
Re:I believe I can fly. (Score:1)
It's all suphurous impurities that makes farts pong. The smell of propane (regular "gas" gas) comes from additives designed to make it easily detectable.
Re:CH4 (Score:1)
Re:I believe I can fly. (Score:1)
Just curious, where did you pick up your vocabulary? I have to say that your usage of the word "pong" cracked me up; as is laughing with you, as opposed to laughing *at* you.
If only... (Score:1)
Re:Kelivins (Score:1)
Round the firewall,
Out the NIC,
Through the router,
Down the wire,
NOTHING BUT NET!
I've seen cuter. (Score:1)
Re:Rain? Yay (Score:1)
Re:What about that hardware problem? (Score:1)
It's definitely an "oops", but it's not something that would show up in ground-based testing unless you specifically tested for that effect. It's easier to forgive them for this one than it was for that metric/imperial screwup on the mars probe.
Re:I believe I can fly. (Score:1)
Webster needs a patch! (Score:2)
a: Water or liquid Methane falling in drops condensed from from vapour or Methane in the atmosphere b: the descent of this water or liquid Methane c: wateror liquid Methane that has fallen as rain
I was just watching the TITANIC and now I'm wondering what icebergs on Titan are made of.
Re:I believe I can fly. (Score:1)
Re:What about that hardware problem? (Score:2)
No, it isn't. Doppler calculations are one of the most fundamental EE tools used in terrestrial satellite system work. Even ham radio operators have to take it into account. This is a truly amazing engineering f***up -- it had to be made at the most fundamental level, where any newly-graduated BSEE should have been able to catch it. It's incredible that it made it into a multi-billion-dollar planetary probe.
Re:I believe I can fly. (Score:2)
-B
Imagine... (Score:1)
Re:rain on titan (Score:2)
Re:-288 degrees? not a problem (Score:1)
Intelligent life my ass (Score:1)
My gawd! (Score:1)
Jeezus christ! Would the rain freeze into hail by the time it hits the surface?
Re:I believe I can fly. (Score:2)
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rainy (Score:1)
Rain? Yay (Score:3)
Rain AND -288F? Oooo sign me up! When's our first mission??
Aw hell, I can get rain and 0F by moving back to New England =)
Re:rain on titan (Score:4)
If i am not mistaken i believe that methane is actually pretty much odorless, when we use it for gas to homes and the like we add chemicals so that we can smell it, and not die (in AU at least)
btw, does anyone know of a site that will point out the best hardware for a dual Linux / Windows box, for gaming and work purposes?
How every version of MICROS~1 Windows(TM) comes to exist.
rain on titan (Score:3)
Weather on Titan... (Score:3)
Hell, that sounds like the average winter in South Dakota! Throw in some livestock and you wouldn't be able to tell the difference. Maybe when we send our first probes their we'll find Mount Zorbarmore and Wa'al Drug left behind by the aliens...
How F-ing much is -288F (Score:3)
Just for those readers born in the 20th century.
Re:rain on titan (Score:1)
Mark Twain in Space (Score:3)
" The worst winter I ever lived through was the summer I spent in San Francisco."
I guess Sam never summered over on Titan.
-288 °F = -178 °C (Score:3)
Of course, I suspect that both these numbers have spurious accuracy.
Hmmm.. thats interesting .... (Score:3)
Re:rain on titan (Score:1)
Re:How F-ing much is -288F (Score:1)
Re:rain on titan (Score:1)
Video Card: Geforce 2 Ultra
Motherboard: Abit KA7-100
Processor: Athlon 850
RAM: 256mb (Trust me, you need this much).
CDRom: Any HP burner will do
Monitor: The ViewSonic PF775 is nice
Sound Card: Sound Blaster live
Network/Modem/Etc: Just check your handy linux compatability lists and find one with the features you like.
About the KA7-100: The HPT370 chipset is not supported 'out of the box' on most distrobutions, but a quick kernel patch/update can fix that. I believe it was introduced in the 2.2.17 kernel tree... If not, Highpoint Technologies has there own kernel patch available.
-Medgur
Re:Mark Twain in Space (Score:1)
CH4 (Score:2)
There is an upside... (Score:1)
Re:Rain? Yay (Score:1)
I believe I can fly. (Score:5)
Lower gravity and denser atmosphere means that you could not only survive on Titan with a much simpler space suite than you need for work on the moon but you can also fly with simple wings sprouting from your arms.
No. I am serious about both points. Since the atmosphere is denser than earth but less dens than say water, you don't need a pressure suite just something completely sealed that wont tear easily and keeps the Methane off your skin. More importantly it only has to deal with cold temperatures not the -200 to +200 degree fluctuations in earth orbit.
About the wings. The reason we were never able to fly with arm mounted wings is that #1 we are generally not strong enough to build manipulate wings that can support a human and #2 those wings have to be so very large.
However on Titan they need only be 1/7th the size of your tipical glider's wingspan. Posibly less if you consider the denser atmosfare. So just as we can fly throgh water by flaping our bare arms we should be able to fly on titan with tiny wings just barley longer than our arms and as little as 2 feet thick. I.e. The sort of thing that can be built into a plastic suite that's all soft on the outside to prevent sparks from igniting that methane.
Better yet wings of that size could be made retractable and the smaller suite means you could store a larger air supply. A rebrether ( filters out your own CO2 ) would do wonders too.
R. Kelly would be proud.
Ew! (Score:1)
Fart clouds, fart rain, fart seas.... disgusting!
Re:I believe I can fly. (Score:2)
Is it made of something less denzse than Silicone and Iron ?
Re:-288 degrees? not a problem (Score:1)
Re:-288 degrees? not a problem (Score:2)
A body without (much) internal heat anywhere in the Solar System is heated by solar radiation, which is mainly visible light. In equilibrium it re-radiates that energy mainly as infrared (the colder it is, the longer the wavelength). If you can surround it with something that is transparent to visible light, but opaque, or reflective, to infrared, then it can;t radiate the heat away and gets hotter. CO2 has such properties to a modest extent. Various rather exotic gasses much more so. It has been computed that adding 1 part per million of some of these gasses to Mars's atmosphere would warm the equator of Mars to the temperatures of the arctic on Earth.
Titan would be a much bigger problem, and it might be more efficient to use some more direct heating method, but the greenhouse effect has its part to play.
Kelivins (Score:1)
Round the firewall,
Out the NIC,
Through the router,
Down the wire,
NOTHING BUT NET!
Experience (Score:1)
Re:SF on Titan (Score:1)
Re:My gawd! (Score:1)
Hail is formed in thunderstorms where supercooled water condenses around dust particles, dirt, grasshoppers, etc, and then it freezes a layer. The newly formed hail stone is then tossed back up into the thunderhead where it receives a new layer of ice. This process continues until the stone becomes to heavy for the winds to lift back up into the anvil of the cumulonimbus thunderhead. This is why hail can be anywhere from pea sized to softball sized. Also, in examining a hail stone, one will notice, upon dissection, that you can observe the ringed layers. Another note is that sleet and freezing rain are primarily cold weather precipitation while hail stones are formed in warmer layers in that chaotic area we call a frontal boundary. Conceivable with winds of infinite speed, you could get hail stones of infinite size.
The Weather, Today! (Score:2)
Especially of note as the surface temp temperatures hover around minus 288 degrees Fahrenheit.
I guess that means the weather-girl on the Daily Titanic News broadcast really would be a frozen bitch.
(Aw ... geez, I'm really politically incorrect today. Even Pooh Bear is hiding from the fallout ...).
Re:damn (Score:1)
Let's start talking about rain again. OK?
Dynoman7
Re:Weather on Titan... (Score:1)
With all that methane in the air, we may get a little loopy and start seeing jack-a-lopes or something. Do they have free water on Titan?
hehe
dynoman7
-288 degrees? not a problem (Score:2)
SF on Titan (Score:1)
So, who got it right (where it actually mattered to the story)?
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Looks like trouble!! (Score:1)
Re:-288 degrees? not a problem (Score:1)
"Rain On Saturn's Titan"
What about that hardware problem? (Score:4)
Apparently some nincompoop on the Cassini design team decided that it would be smart to not design the reciever on the orbiting probe to have enough bandwidth to take in all of the data that the probes in the atmosphere/on the surface could send up. Not smart.
Rami
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Woot! (Score:1)
Re:I believe I can fly. (Score:2)
Yes. The density of the Earth varies with radius, being greatest in the iron core. The moon is just a hunk of rock.
Re:I believe I can fly. (Score:1)
^.
Forget the Huygens Probe (Score:1)
^.
Re:I believe I can fly. (Score:1)
BTW: At those tempretures you nead to generate heet inside the suite. Not just insulate it.
Re:I believe I can fly. (Score:3)
I must say, Forge, that this is probably the most interesting comment in this whole discussion. It reminds me of what the humans believe the Overlords' world looks like in Arthur C. Clarke's "Childhood's End"; since the Overlords are huge, but still have flight-worthy wings, that their home planet must have low gravity and a dense atmosphere.
Re:rain on titan (Score:1)
Re:-288 degrees? not a problem (Score:1)