NASA Picks Up Rainstorms On Titan 110
RedEaredSlider writes "Rainy seasons aren't just a regular occurrence on Earth — they also happen on Titan, the largest moon of Saturn. The rain isn't water, it's methane. And the seasons are years long, as Titan takes two weeks to go around Saturn and Saturn takes 29 years to complete one circuit of the Sun. Recent images from the Cassini probe, which is currently orbiting Saturn, show clouds forming in Titan's atmosphere and evidence that liquid methane is soaking the surface."
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You don't know, and I don't know too
Re:I'm pretty sure Titan is the home of... (Score:5, Informative)
It strikes me as odd that a celestial body can be drenched in hydrocarbons like that yet no fire. Here on earth all it takes is dry conditions for a few weeks and fires pop up all over. How can Titan be a ball of flammable substances which remains unlit?
To burn you need fuel and oxidiser. The atmosphere on Titan is like the inside of a Nitrogen fire extinguisher. Any oxygen on Titan long ago combined with hydrogen to make water. There is a lot of water on Titan. The planet is actually made of the stuff. Having said that I wonder if oxygen or another oxidiser could have survived under ground where the Methane can't get at it. Such fossil fuels could lead to the return of the internal combustion engine, but this time in the outer solar system.
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You also need one other critical component: heat. Considering the temperature on Titan is somewhere around -179C, fires aren't going to break out any time soon.
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You also need one other critical component: heat. Considering the temperature on Titan is somewhere around -179C, fires aren't going to break out any time soon.
No but they would have when Titan was forming.
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There is a lot of water on Titan. The planet is actually made of the stuff.
Did you really just call Titan a planet? Either you did, or your post is written in an especially confusing way. Now, which of us needs our morning coffee before posting on Slashdot again?
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Coffee for everyone!
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As I discovered trying to light a camp fire at 5000 feet..
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Probably because Titan is less oxygen-rich than the Earth and fire requires oxygen?
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1.5x Atm -OR - 14.7psia * 1.5 = 22.05psia. Methane at this pressure is mostly liquid.
1. Its melting point is then -279 deg(F).
2. It would flash at -204.26 deg(F) with an ignition source.
3. It would auto ignite (again, sufficient oxygen) at -271.02 deg(F).
However this is all very academic as the temperature on the surface averages -355
Years long... (Score:5, Interesting)
Can someone explain to me how long these years are? I find the TFA confusing.
Our years are calculated by the circuit of our own planet around the sun. So does this rainy weather last for literal earth years or are they talking about relative years? And then: Saturn yars or Titan years? And what would a Titan year be since it doesn't revolve around the sun directly.
Yeah, I don't have a clue about astronomy ;).
Re:Years long... (Score:4, Insightful)
Can someone explain to me how long these years are? I find the TFA confusing.
Our years are calculated by the circuit of our own planet around the sun. So does this rainy weather last for literal earth years or are they talking about relative years? And then: Saturn yars or Titan years? And what would a Titan year be since it doesn't revolve around the sun directly.
Yeah, I don't have a clue about astronomy ;).
And the seasons are years long, as Titan takes two weeks to go around Saturn and Saturn takes 29 years to complete one circuit of the Sun.
Obviously we're talking about Earth years, because Saturn revolving once around the sun cannot possibly take 29 Saturn years as that would completely contradict the definition of the word "year".
Re:Years long... (Score:5, Informative)
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from TFA:
"In tropical regions moisture rises as the sun heats the surface, and it precipitates out as rain, which is why rain forests tend to occur in those latitudes."
"Tend to occur" my ass. First, a rainforest is not always in the tropics. Second, a tropic rainforest, like the ones that 'tend to occur at those latitudes' occurs all around earth in the tropics where there is land because sunlight is maximum all year long- NOT because they get rain all year long. A high fraction of the water that is in the
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Just a random thought; a day in Titan lasts almost 16 Earth days. If humans evolved in Titan instead, would that mean that we'd spend the equivalent of 16 Earth days awake also, and maybe almost the same amount sleeping?
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Re:Years long... (Score:5, Informative)
As far as I'm aware, the evolutionary effects on circadian rhythms on other planetary bodies is a study that has not yet been conducted.
I guess that means the answer to your question is.... maybe.
Re:Years long... (Score:4, Interesting)
There was a study where they put a subject in an underground mine (they built him and underground house in there, or lair if you prefer) and only let him have contact through a video link to an operator's booth above.
The operators would be relieved and assigned shifts in a random way so that the subject could not infer how long each operator was present nor how long their shifts were.
After a few weeks/months of this, the subject began having 33-hour days and 11-hour nights.
So the sun really DOES influence human wake/sleep periods. What the 33/11 ratio means is anyone's guess though...
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I know, personally, several participants in such experiments.
They were carried out in the 1960s (when I was concentrating on potty training!) in various natural caverns in Northern England. Gaping Ghyll for one ; stump cross caverns for another. The "incarcerated person" was generally (alwa
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Thanks for fascinating insight, RD.
I know I saw a documentary about it some years ago, it might have been on The Nature of Things with David Suzuki, I'm not sure...
Anyhow, interesting study. Thanks for the info!
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You mean Los verdes?
(Reference to Pluton B.R.B Nero, a series you probably don't know, since AFAIK it never got English subs. It's Alex de la Iglesia's shot at space comedy. A sort of Spanish Red Dwarf, except Lorna is so much hotter than Kochanski ;) . It was absolutely brilliant, if you can find subs or understand some Spanish, you should definitely take a look at it. Specially if you enjoy Alex's movies, It's as clever as the Oxford Murders, as funny as El dia de la Bestia, and as bizarre as Mutant Actio
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Well, forgot to explain the actual reference.
In an Episode, they reach a planet that is 100 times the size of the earth, and it's inhabited by a humanoid species whose individuals seem to be motionless, but they are actually just incredibly slow.
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Polar night varies from 20 hours at the Arctic Circle to 179 days at the pole, places like Barrow Alaska do polar night for 65 days, but that doesn't mean it's night outside every where, it gets a strange twilight for most of the area.
Past 84 33' theres no twilight, but there are no permanent human settlements that far north/south, just science stations.
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Years on Titan are the same as years on Saturn. A day on Titan is the same period as an orbit around Saturn. Years are important on Earth, Saturn and Titan because the axial tilt makes the sun move from North to South and back. Additionally the eccentricity in the orbit makes the planet move towards and away from the sun. The rainy season on Titan may actually last for Earth years. But particular period of rain may go for hours, days or weeks.
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Err, Titan and Saturn are in rotational/ orbital resonance?
When Saturn-Titan-Sun are co-linear then Titan will get eclipses. Which are likely to be meteorologically important. For Titan. The corresponding solar eclipses on Saturn by Titan are unlikely to be significant to Saturn.
Titan is essentially co-planar with Saturn's rings (gravity assures me of that). Saturn's rings are around 20 degrees inclined to the ecliptic.
Without having (to hand)
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Err, Titan and Saturn are in rotational/ orbital resonance?
I think its pretty clear. Ignoring issues of sidereal motion, the sun goes around the sky on Titan in the same time as Titan orbits Saturn.
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It's a bit surprising too, because most of the cases of orbital synchronisation that I've heard of are when the orbit is very tight. Or, in the case of Earth-Moon, the synchronisation is thought to have developed very early in the evolution of the system when the Moon was very close to it's Roche limit.
Interesting.
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First to answer your question:
The terms used ARE confusing because the terms "day", "month" and "year" are all relative to what planet you're talking about.
Saturn's year (1 circuit around the sun) is 29 Earth-years, approximately.
Saturn is, like earth, tilted about 26 degrees on its axis, so it would have 'seasons' approximately in the same way that earth does - as it goes around in its orbit, the sun would be shining directly on the northern hemisphere and southern hemispheres, alternately, with the solsti
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Titan (as far as I can tell) orbits almost exactly around Saturn's equator, so it too is inclined 26 degrees to the Sun.
The only major satellite that does not orbit very near its planet's equatorial plane is Earth's Moon.
https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/File:Earth-Moon.PNG [wikimedia.org]
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Whups thanks.
Was mentally thinking that its rotation was synchronus...definitely a goof saying 'geosynchronus'. Wow. Monday.
All together now... (Score:1)
Raindrops keep falling on my head....AAAAAaaaaaarrrrrrrrrrggggggggghhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
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A little methane never hurt anyone.
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A little methane never hurt anyone.
True... But we're talking a lot of methane, liquid methane at -180 degrees C; enough to carve channels in the landscape and form lakes. It's not just a little methane.
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....AAAAAaaaaaarrrrrrrrrrggggggggghhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
I like your version better.
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Methane on Titan would flash-freeze you, since Titan's temperature is around 93.7 K (179.5 C), so AAAAAaaaaaarrrrrrrrrrggggggggghhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh is quite apt. Let's not forget that you'd have nothing to breathe, either.
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Methane on Titan would flash-freeze you, since Titan's temperature is around 93.7 K (179.5 C).
I think you mean -179.5 C but think of it this way. Titan is about twice as cold as the coldest place on Earth. I once had a job collecting data from remote weather stations in Antarctica. One day a station reported -75C.
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It doesn't really make any sense to describe something as "twice as cold", especially when you're using a scale based on an arbitrary zero point.
It does make sense to say that the coldest place on Earth is twice as warm as Titan, though.
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Although GP did not state it, the -75C temperature cited is 198K, which is a little more than twice as warm as Titan. Kelvin has a non-arbitrary zero point. (I am not insinuating that you dispute any of this, just making the GP's point perhaps a little more clear in light of the semantics lesson.)
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Wikipedia gives 184 K (-89.2 C) as the coldest temperature on Earth and I suppose people would walk around with just very warm clothing on at that temperature. For a while, anyway. So my point (if I have one) is that while 93K sounds cold its actually not beyond possibility that a person could walk around on Titan with a bottle of oxygen and some well insulated clothing. Heated boots would be a good idea. Wear mittens, not gloves.
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Let's not forget that you'd have nothing to breathe, either.
Maybe he was dictating?
Re:God farts? (Score:4, Informative)
Methane is not exclusively produced by biological organisms anymore than oxygen is exclusively produced by plants and trees. The process by which methane is thought to be produced on other planets, moons, etc. is abiotic.
Furthermore, only 1-10% of a fart is methane. Interestingly enough, that is not the part that smells bad. It is the trace gases that give it the smell.
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Makes me wonder if there could be "Fossil Oxidisers" on Titan, analogous to the fossil fuels on Earth. Maybe oxidisers could be found under ground and dug up so colonists could run their SUVs on Methane.
Re:God farts? (Score:5, Funny)
It is the trace gases that give it the smell.
And here I thought it was because it was air that came out of your ass that made it smell bad.
NASA Picks Up Rainstorms On Titan (Score:1)
are we there yet (Score:1)
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We haven't got the technology to do it. Nobody does.
The gas giants are a long way away, and even with magical future-tech nuclear-electric engines several orders of magnitude more powerful than the ones we can build today, it'd still take over a year to get to them. If you're using something more realistic for a near future launch, like a combination of chemical rockets and solar-electric, you'd be talking about travel times close to a full decade.
Long travel times like that are a death sentence for astrona
To boldly go - (Score:1)
My employer (disclosure) has a proposal out for a NASA discovery-class mission to put a boat (yes, a boat) on the surface methane seas of Titan;
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8409052.stm [bbc.co.uk]
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2010LPI....41.1236S [harvard.edu]
http://nextbigfuture.com/2010/01/carnival-of-space-135-proposed-titan.html [nextbigfuture.com]
It's called the Titan Mare Explorer (TiME) and let me just say, it's the coolest thing that I've ever come anywhere near close to working on. Not much of a Catholic anymore but I say a littler prayer each
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Shunting robots about the solar system is three or four orders of magnitude easier, plus one more order of magnitude if you are getting some form of government backing.
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WAY too far away, my friend. Titan could be made of petroleum and gold and it still wouldn't be worth the effort.
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Jupiter and Saturn have magnetospheric energy strong enough to power as many crafts as we would like (positioned accordingly of course)
Nope, Saturn's magnetic field is actually less powerful than Earth's, although it is much larger. From Wiki:
Saturn has an intrinsic magnetic field that has a simple, symmetric shape—a magnetic dipole. Its strength at the equator—0.2 gauss (20 T)—is approximately one twentieth than that of the field around Jupiter and slightly weaker than Earth's magnetic field. As a result Saturn's magnetosphere is much smaller than Jupiter's and extends slightly beyond the orbit of Titan. Most probably,
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no practical reason? (Score:4, Insightful)
Why do people always say that there is no practical reason for space exploration? I just don't get it.
Titan is a wonderful example. A planet with literally 100's of times more hydrocarbons than Earth. That seems like a reasonable excuse to go there and develop mining and extraction techniques.
You can get never get to the point where space exploitation makes sense unless you start.
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Shipping tons of hydrocarbons to earth doesn't sound like the best plan to me. It would decrease oxygen levels and increase CO2 if done in big enough numbers.
Re:no practical reason? (Score:4, Insightful)
GP didn't say they had to go to Earth. Those gasses would go a long way on Mars or Luna.
(See Imperial Earth by Arthur C Clarke for a good book on the subject)
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Where there's already no free oxygen to burn them with, so they'd be pretty much useless as fuel.
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Where there's already no free oxygen to burn them with, so they'd be pretty much useless as fuel.
Handy as an atmosphere though. Methane is a great greenhouse gas.
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Imperial Earth by Arthur C Clark
Oh, I've read that book, but I didn't know it was written by him. Although this story did remind me of it immediately.
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You could scoop gases from the atmosphere. In effect, aerobraking and mining at the same time. Judge it right and you could return to the inner solar system without using much fuel. If your spacecraft uses nuclear engines the gas you collect could be used immediately as a reaction mass.
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Do you really want to pay fuel prices above 200 million USD per litre?
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Why do people always say that there is no practical reason for space exploration? I just don't get it.
Hard to say without finding someone who is actually saying that. Mostly I just hear people saying that there is no practical reason for sending humans to do a robots job.
Titan is a wonderful example. A planet with literally 100's of times more hydrocarbons than Earth. That seems like a reasonable excuse to go there and develop mining and extraction techniques.
Well, Titan isn't a planet. Also it isn't possible to carry enough methane (by mass) to make it worthwhile to transport from Titan. It would take more energy to transport to the inner planets then we could gain from the cargo, meaning it's cheaper to manufacture on-site.
Re:no practical reason? (Score:4, Informative)
2 things:
1. pure science for the sake of pure science always eventually winds up making incredible discoveries that alter history and result in trillions of dollars of economic activity. that's why worrying about "no practical reason" is silly: it just means the person raising the issue doesn't understand science or history
2. mining hydrocarbons on titan, and taking them somewhere else: anywhere, even just another moon of saturn, is completely ridiculous. its like flying from LA to Hong Kong to get your lunch time sandwich. you need an oxidizer too
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it's like medieval mankind inventing guns, rockets, and laser cannons...
all in order to go to endor to get more wood to make bows and arrows
what the hell is wrong with you? seriously. you think its valid to get all this technology together, to go to titan, to get hydrocarbons!?
are you gw bush? i know the usa has a petroleum addiction, but this is hilarious
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yes. and the time space travel is cheap enough to go to titan, the idea of going there to export hydrocarbons will make as much sense as inventing guns, rockets and laser cannons to go to endor to get more wood to make bows and arrows
you're imagining that it will be useful to use advanced technology to solve the problems of a dying technological era. the petroleum age is ending dude. by the time we're going to titan cheaply, we'll all have fusion power generators in our pockets
Weather (Score:3)
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If the price of gas keeps raising (Score:2)