Lake spotted on Titan? 197
jahead writes "It looks like
a lake has been seen on Saturn's moon Titan by the Cassini probe. But don't get too excited yet. As mentioned by Elizabeth Turtle in the article, it could also be a dried up lake that left dark deposits."
Act now!!! (Score:5, Funny)
Great deal (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Great deal (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Great deal (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Great deal (Score:2)
Re:Great deal (Score:2)
Re:Act now!!! (Score:2)
Re:Act now!!! (Score:2, Funny)
Watch Out!!! (Score:2)
What would be the significance of this? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:5, Insightful)
I basically agree with you - the 'wow' factor is nice, but the true value is still pretty questionable.
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2)
Look in the volcano (Score:5, Informative)
Titan's atmosphere is also full of a haze of complex organic molecules that continually rain down on the surface... leaving deposits of hydrocarbons on the surface hundreds of meters thick.
Now if only these complex organics could get mixed in with water. (And it has to be water, because you need the oxygen). Guess what 'rocks' on Titan are made out of
So you might have something happening in this methane lake with methane being the liquid and oxygen coming from ice... but this would be completely different from life as we know it...
My own bet is on the volcano to look for life (The volcano on Titan erupts molten water). Also there might be life in Titan's mantle (it's made of liquid water + ammonia mixture).
(This website: http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/multimedia/products/pr
Re:Look in the volcano (Score:2)
Some days, you just can't tell the difference.
= 9J =
Re:Look in the volcano (Score:2)
Yeah, but molten water sounds like lava. Cryovolcanos are cool - get it? cool
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:5, Interesting)
As for methane-based life, I think it's unlikely just because of the extraordinarily low temperatures on there.
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2)
Bah! I would say that the Sun is the most unique body in this solar system.
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:4, Interesting)
I think what we are forgeting is that it seems that we know less about space than sometimes we think. For example, if memory serves me right, there is a lot of dark matter in the fringes of the galaxy- we know it is there because something is having an effect on other bodies there, however we can't detect it because it doesn't seem to emit any known energy source... (Caveat- I am not an astronomer, just a hobbyist, so take my assertion with a salt grain)
So in my line of reasoning, it seems that this lake on Titan may not have the same characteristics as a similar lake on Earth, for a plethora of reasons that we may not understand yet.
All that aside, how cool would it be to swim on another planet, even if in a lake of methane...
And for those with tinfoil hats- keep in mind that some assume that we don't get real info from NASA- such as those who say that gravity on the moon is much closer to the Earth's gravity, unlike what we are told, but this can't be released because it would throw a Geurilla Wrench into the theory of relativity....
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2)
Believe me - any aspiring scientist would LOVE to throw a Guerilla Wrench into the theory of relativity. How does a Nobel prize sounds to you?
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2)
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2)
Until the sun starts to edge towards being a red giant... Titan will have ample opportunity to be toasty then. Admittedly, not for a period anywhere near as long as earth has enjoyed, and the surface of the sun will be much closer to Titan leading to some minor inconveniences of radiation....
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2)
Has Zordak (123132) said in a slightly different thread
However Titan isn't perpetually frozen, it does lack Sunlight as a energy source. Titan's core provides heat, so the ecology would be inverse to our own. Kind of like the Hollow planet theories that where thrown around by The Vril Society and in Bulwer Lytton's novel The Coming Race (1871). [conspiracyarchive.com]
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2)
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2, Insightful)
That is because mod's are fickle idiots. They don't agree with something so mod it troll. I get meta-mods two-three times a day...if i see yours i will meta-mod it.
On the whole, I agree with you - this is not that impressive. I don't think anyone is going to say "hey lets go swim in liquid methane"...if it was water I would be more impressed. Obviously on a planet that rain's methane there would be a buildup of methane which would equate to a pool. It's like being shocked we have lakes full of wat
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:4, Interesting)
Uhm, not to be obtuse, but why shouldn't we drain and use the oil here on Earth? Do you think that if we leave it in the ground, it'll somehow eventually turn back into dinosaurs? It's a plentiful, efficient, portable, cheap (relative to the alternatives) energy source.
The problem with oil isn't that we're using it - it's that we have no plan to handle the byproducts produced by using it. The pollution is the problem. Global warming, smog, and all that. There's no benefit to leaving the oil in the ground and switching to more expensive energy sources before it's necessary.
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:5, Insightful)
So the hangover is the problem, not the drinking?
One is caused by the other. If we can't effectivly eliminate the issues our planet suffers by using fossil fuels, then we need to stop.
Can we handle the alternative? (Score:3, Interesting)
While we all can agree manki
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2)
To continue your analogy:
Being an alcoholic, then, is only a problem when you run out of alcohol?
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2)
...you first?
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2, Flamebait)
Grain of salt taken.
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2)
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:3, Interesting)
See your answer below.
The pollution is the problem. Global warming, smog, and all that.
"It's not the shooting that's the problem... it's the holes poked in everything! Just because we don't have a solution now is no reason to stop shooting indiscriminately."
=tkk
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:3, Interesting)
Who knows if we would've gotten this far without them. Is it realistically possible to go from water and wood burning straight to nuclear and solar? Could we have made the leaps in technology that we have without such a cheap and abundant energy
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2)
So my answer to your question is "no". Fusion requires materials that can only be researched and developed using advanced (oil-powered) industrial techniques. Wood power just isn't efficient enough.
Conservation (Score:2)
I don't know why we'll need these oil reserves in the future, just that it will undoubtably come in useful sometime during the next 10,000 years. It's extremely shortsighted to say that our needs to drive Hummers out to exburbs on 35-acre ranchettes because the relatively affluent don't want neighbors in an urban environment is more
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2)
Having said all that, as supply goes down, prices will go up, and eventually other energy sources will come to the forefront. There's going to be a lot of painful upheaval as that happens, unless we start preparing for it.
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2)
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2)
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:5, Informative)
Liquids require pressure (see this [wikipedia.org]) while solids and gasses don't, and pressure is a rare thing in space.
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:3)
Doesn't Venus have lava on its surface?
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:5, Informative)
As for your venus question, I would venture to imagine that lava, as a higly viscous fluid would remain liquid at a relatively low pressure. The other mention is that the surface of venus is basically a massive cooking oven from all of the cloud cover of various Sulfur oxides, which would provide both sufficient temperature (from the greenhouse effect) as well as indicate a high amount of atmospheric pressure.
What's significant about this was that it was initially hypothesized that since titan had a considerable atmosphere of methane and other hydrocarbons, that the surface of Titan was possibly covered in either a massive liquid methane ocean or a methane ice sheet. However once the Huygens probe landed, that hypothesis was disproved (the one about liquid methane on the surface).
With what looks like a lakebed (even if it's dry) on the surface of Titan, this provides evidence that there once was/still is some liquid which eroded the landscape, which confirms that Titan's atmosphere may be more substantial than other planet's and that it may be more like earth.
no methane ice sheets either (Score:2)
No methane ice sheet either.... Cassini's instruments (specifically VIMS I think) have shown that the surface is mostly water ice.
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2, Interesting)
I guess I do not understand your meaning. If anything, a solid requires more pressure than a liquid. If you have a system (held isothermal) composed of a gas and you increase the pressure, what happens? It condenses to a liquid. Continue to increase the pressure, and then what? Your liquid freezes to a solid.
Given the context of space, I think I see your intention. That is, at extremely low temper
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2)
A common molecule, CO2 (Carbon Dioxide), does not form a liquid at normal pressure (I think it takes 7 atmospheres, a google search will reveal it but I'm too lazy to bother). It is called Dry Ice when frozen, because when it melts, it directly subliminates to a gas. the point is that Dry Ice illustrates what happens to other compounds at low pressures.
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2)
Don't forget that there are billions of stars just in our galaxy so saying that pressure is rare in space is a HUGE assumption.
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:5, Interesting)
Io was the second known body to have liquids on its surface (1979 Voyager flybys discovered active, extrusive volcanism). Titan was next, though we couldn't see through the clouds, so we had no idea. Triton was the fourth to possibly have liquids on its surface, though we still don't know for sure. Venus also likely has some liquid lava on its surface, though we've not seen actual volcanism. Plus, Venus probably sometimes has sulfuric acid rains, but we're not sure. Mars may also have transient liquids on its surface.
Titan's cool because it's probably got an active hydrologic cycle (don't read hydro- to mean water, read it to mean fluid). Earth does, Venus might, Io has. . . something, Mars had one, it might still, occasionally. Triton has. .
Earth is a big body, so it still has radionuclide heat, and it's close to the sun, so it's got an abundance of energy to drive a hydrologic cycle. We can't see through Venus' clouds with more than RADAR, so we don't know what's going on there. Mars is small, so its heat has mostly left it, and it gets nearly 1/4 the energy the Earth gets from the sun, so it's cold and has little atmosphere left. Io is in a weird, slightly eccentric, orbital resonance, so its energy comes at the expense of Jupiter (and Ganymede and Europa). Titan's also in an eccentric orbit, but it doesn't have the resonance with other sats that Io has, so it "should" have lost most of its energy--one of the mysteries is why such a small body has such a huge atmosphere (and thus a hydrologic cycle). Triton might have a bit of an atmosphere, and why is also a mystery.
So, of the many, many bodies in the solar system, there are only a few that have atmospheres, and fewer that have an active, observable hydrologic cycle. . .
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2)
If you want to understand the conditions that
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2)
Actually no. Liquids cannot exist in a vacuum. Instead, some portion of the mass flashes into a vapor. This change of state reduces the temperature of the remaining mass until it freezes into a solid. So in a true vacuum (like space) matter only exists in three states, solid, gaseous, plasma. I tried to find a good link for an explanation, but this was the best I could find on short notice. If you look at the summary, you will find a line that says, "When pressure is s
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2)
Also you're assuming there is no heat source in the centre of the body. This would keep it at a liquid state, with a thin vapour atmosphere. Imagine if a liquid methane planet crashed into a liquid oxygen planet. And someone lit a match!
Re:Incorrect (Score:2)
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2)
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2)
It takes a peculiar set of circumstances for a liquid to persist long-term on the surface of a planet; just to start with, you need an atmosphere of high enough pressure to get above the triple point. Below that pressure, the solid phase transitions
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2)
So now you have stumbled upon the real reason that
Dubya wants to "go to Mars". What better reason
than that to invade, if not to scrounge new energy
sources for this regime's taskmasters?
Mere water lakes implies possible life there, and
the likely conflict over natural resources. OTOH,
methane breathes new life into the USA's petroleum
industry, even if only for export to Mars. Just
think of the transportation fees Haliburton could
charge! New sources of energy and new markets,
but with Uncle (Sucker) Sam
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:3)
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2)
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2)
If I hadn't used them all by now modding down people who say 'Feel free to mod me down, but...' or '...And I know you're all going to mod me down for saying it!'
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2)
I get moderator points like once every few weeks to a month or so. I guess if you meta-moderate you get better chances of getting points, but you think that someone with excellent karma and a good posting record would get points more often.
Oh well, time to metamoderate I guess.
Re:What would be the significance of this? (Score:2)
I get moderator points like once every few weeks to a month or so. I guess if you meta-moderate you get better chances of getting points, but you think that someone with excellent karma and a good posting record would get points more often.
Fly Fishing (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Fly Fishing (Score:2)
Strewth... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Strewth... (Score:2, Funny)
Not a lake (Score:4, Funny)
Got a match? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Got a match? (Score:2, Informative)
It could also be.. (Score:3, Insightful)
IANA rocket scientist but.. Would we not be excited if it turned out to be a lake -- dried up or otherwise? I mean, are dried-up lakes often found out there, relative to not-yet-dried-up ones? Just curious.
Re:It could also be.. (Score:2)
Being a lake of methane does create unique problems I guess. It might be hard to do things around it with electrical equipment without blowing up the entire lake. I wonder if methane can blow up in a place without oxygen.
Re:It could also be.. (Score:2)
Not to belabour the point, but likewise I would imagine we could land near (or even in) a dried up lake and do research on the deposits?
I guess my original question was: why would the dried-up-ness matter so much? TFA is sort of neutral but the summary suggests that it would be a big disappointment if it were dried up. Presumably this is because of a belief that some fluids are prerequisite to life, but where exactly does t
Re:It could also be.. (Score:2)
Oh, wait. Titan of course DOES have an atmosphere, so they'd better have a mic up there.
So there's this feature... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:So there's this feature... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:So there's this feature... (Score:2)
Re:So there's this feature... (Score:2)
Re:So there's this feature... (Score:2)
Re:So there's this feature... (Score:2)
So maybe I was wrong in that finding *liquid* was not something they hadn't fully expected, but Cassini was never designed to determine whether any part of the surface was liquid or solid.
Yes (Score:2)
Re:Yes (Score:2)
I'd love to know what happens at the discussions (Score:2)
Re:So there's this feature... (Score:2)
The wrong set of instruments (Score:2, Insightful)
The instruments on Cassini and Huygens are revealing Titan as place worthy of much further exploration. I thought the reveal of a river bed like structure on an ice moon was worth the price of admission alone. Total success in my book, if nothing more these missions define what we might want to send in subsequent probes.
Re:So there's this feature... (Score:2)
Re:So there's this feature... (Score:2)
Re:So there's this feature... (Score:3)
Re:So there's this feature... (Score:2)
Re:So there's this feature... (Score:2)
Any sign of any... (Score:3, Funny)
Interesting thought to ponder and discuss. (Score:3, Interesting)
What if one of them returned images of cities, or villages, either deserted or actively inhabited. - What do you think would happen? Would there be a giant cover up? Or maybe a giant newsflash? Would those responsible for the probe just publically "forget" that they ever sent a probe there?
Re:Interesting thought to ponder and discuss. (Score:2)
Choose your favorite fan fiction:
- War of the Worlds
- Mars Attacks
- Contact
- Red Planet
By the by, the Seti project has discovered not one but a handful of interesting candidate signals. The results of this, and reobservation of one of the most interesting signals, was for the Seti group to totally downplay the news. As such, not many people know about it.
I suspect the same thing for any find - a brief news bite that is downplayed by the experts and ordinary people focus on what
Fill'er up! (Score:2)
Could you fill up on Titan with methane fuel and on Saturn with oxigen?
News Flash: Titan's atmosphere wiped out (Score:2, Funny)
Cassini> Can you see anything down there yet?
Huygens> Not really, it's pretty dark.
Cassini> Turn on your flashlight.
Huygens> Alright, taking it out... aw crap, I dropped it, not gettin that one back, I'm still at 10,000 meters.
Cassini> Oh that sucks, what about your water proof matches? Says here in the manual that we should use them in case of emergency.
Huygens> Well, it's better than sitting here in the dark... Taking them out, opening th
If it *is* a lake... (Score:2)
Re:Tough troll (Score:5, Funny)
A few weeks ago, a lake mysteriously went missing [sciencedaily.com] in Russia. Back then, many people suspected that the lake had gotten fed up with the villagers throwing garbage into it, and just walked away. I guess we now know where it went :7
Re:Tough troll (Score:2)
How about:
"Maybe that enourmous dark crater is where all the fucking documentation in the [something] distro went!"
or:
"Looks like all the Linux geeks ejaculated in the same spot as part of a big circle-jerk of penguin love."
Sprinkle with random links to wherever you want.
Re:Light please! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Light please! (Score:2)
And if the (RIAA|MPAA|Terrorists|United States|SCO Corporation|Republicans|Democrats|.*) gets their way, there'll be no free oxygen on Earth either!
RMS! Woohoo!
</sarcasm>
Re:Interesting, but... (Score:2, Informative)
Mod parent down (Score:2)