Titan gets a dune 'makeover'
Credit: Catherine
Neish/NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASI/GSFC
|
Titan's
siblings must be jealous. While most of Saturn's moons display their ancient
faces pockmarked by thousands of craters, Titan -- Saturn's largest moon -- may
look much younger than it really is because its craters are getting erased.
Dunes of exotic, hydrocarbon sand are slowly but steadily filling in its
craters, according to new research using observations from NASA's Cassini
spacecraft. "Most of the Saturnian satellites -- Titan's siblings -- have
thousands and thousands of craters on their surface. So far on Titan, of the 50
percent of the surface that we've seen in high resolution, we've only found about
60 craters," said Catherine Neish, a Cassini radar team associate based at
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. "It's possible that
there are many more craters on Titan, but they are not visible from space
because they are so eroded. We typically estimate the age of a planet's surface
by counting the number of craters on it (more craters means an older surface).
But if processes like stream erosion or drifting sand dunes are filling them
in, it's possible that the surface is much older that it appears."
"This
research is the first quantitative estimate of how much the weather on Titan
has modified its surface," adds Neish.
Titan
is the only moon in the solar system with a thick atmosphere, and the only
world besides Earth known to have lakes and seas on its surface. However, with
a frigid surface temperature of around minus 290 degrees Fahrenheit (94
kelvins), the rain that falls from Titan's skies is not water but instead
liquid methane and ethane, compounds that are normally gases on Earth.
Neish
and her team made the discovery by comparing craters on Titan to craters on
Jupiter's moon Ganymede. Ganymede is a giant moon with a water ice crust,
similar to Titan, so craters on the two moons should have similar shapes.
However, Ganymede has almost no atmosphere and thus no wind or rain to erode
its surface.
"We found that craters on Titan were on average hundreds of
yards (meters) shallower than similarly sized craters on Ganymede, suggesting
that some process on Titan is filling its craters," says Neish, who is
lead author of a paper about this research published online in the journal IcarusDec. 3, 2012.
The
team used the average depth-versus-diameter trend for craters on Ganymede
derived from stereo images from NASA's Galileo spacecraft. The same trend for
craters on Titan was calculated using estimates of the crater depth from data
derived from images made by Cassini's radar instrument.
nasa.gov |
Titan's
atmosphere is mostly nitrogen with a trace of methane and other, more complex
molecules made of hydrogen and carbon (hydrocarbons). The source of Titan's
methane remains a mystery because methane in the atmosphere is broken down over
relatively short timescales by sunlight. Fragments of methane molecules then
recombine into more complex hydrocarbons in the upper atmosphere, forming a
thick, orange smog that hides the surface from view. Some of the larger
particles eventually rain out on to the surface, where they appear to get bound
together to form the sand.
"Since
the sand appears to be produced from the atmospheric methane, Titan must have
had methane in its atmosphere for at least several hundred million years in
order to fill craters to the levels we are seeing," says Neish. However,
researchers estimate Titan's current supply of methane should be broken down by
sunlight within tens of millions of years, so Titan either had a lot more
methane in the past, or it is being replenished somehow.
Team
members say it's possible that other processes could be filling the craters on
Titan: erosion from the flow of liquid methane and ethane for example. However,
this type of weathering tends to fill a crater quickly at first, then more
slowly as the crater rim gets worn down and less steep. If liquid erosion were
primarily responsible for the infill, then the team would expect to see a lot
of partially filled craters on Titan. "However, this is not the
case," says Neish. "Instead we see craters at all stages; some just
beginning to be filled in, some halfway, and some that are almost completely
full. This suggests a process like windblown sand, which fills craters and
other features at a steady rate."
All
solid materials under stress flow very slowly over time. This is called viscous
flow, and it is like what happens when someone takes a scoop out of a fresh tub
of whipped cream -- the material slowly flows in to fill the hole and flatten
the surface. Craters on icy satellites tend to get shallower over time as the
ice flows viscously, so it's possible that some of the shallow craters on Titan
are simply much older or experienced a higher heat flow than the similarly
sized, fresh craters on Ganymede studied in this work.
However,
Titan's crust is mostly water ice, and at the extremely low temperatures on
Titan, ice shouldn't flow enough to account for such a large difference in
depth compared to the Ganymede craters, according to the team. Also, just like
stream erosion, deformation from viscous flow tends to happen rapidly at first,
then more slowly as the material adjusts, so one would expect to see a lot of
partially filled craters on Titan if its surface was deforming easily through
viscous flow.
As
Cassini flies past Titan on its multi-year tour of Saturn and its moons, the
radar instrument gradually builds up a map of the surface. To date, the
instrument has provided data in strips covering approximately 50 percent of
Titan's surface. The craters measured by the team are all within about 30
degrees of the equator, a relatively dry region on Titan.
"However,
the presence of liquids on the surface and in the near subsurface can also
cause extensive modification to crater shape, as is observed on Earth,"
says Neish. "In the case of Titan, liquids consist of hydrocarbons, either
as wet sediments (such as those observed at the Huygens landing site) or
shallow marine environments (such as the lakes observed at the north and south
poles). Craters formed in similar environments on Earth lack any significant
surface topography, including the absence of a raised rim, as wet sediments
slump into the crater. It is possible that the lack of topography associated
with marine-target impacts may help to explain the relative scarcity of impact
craters observed near the poles of Titan. If Titan's polar regions are
saturated by liquid hydrocarbons, craters formed in those regions may lack any
recognizable topographic expression."
The
team thinks these considerations are good areas for more research, but based on
the data so far, the difference in depth between craters on Titan and Ganymede
is best explained by filling from windblown sand, although erosion from liquids
and viscous flow might contribute to the modification of Titan's craters.
NASA's
Cassini mission, managed by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena,
Calif., and the NASA Postdoctoral Program, administered by Oak Ridge Associated
Universities, funded the research.
Source: NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center
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