Is titan hiding an ocean?
April 19, 2011 By Jason Major
Titan holds yet more secrets beneath its haze. Credit: NASA / JPL / SSI
Saturn's moon Titan just keeps throwing surprises at us. A multi-layered atmosphere thicker than our own? Check. A hydrologic cycle that relies on methane as the operating liquid? Check. Rivers, streams and lakes filled with this same liquid? Check, check and check. And now, scientists are suspecting that Titan may have yet another surprise: a subsurface ocean.
Observations of Titans rotation and orbit, carried out by researchers at the Royal Observatory of Belgium using Cassini data, point at an unusual rotational inertia; that is, its resistance to changes in its motion, also known as moment of inertia or angular mass. Basically Titan moves in a way that is not indicative of a solid body of its previously assumed density and mass. Rather, its motion both around its own axis and in its tidally-locked orbit around Saturn are more in line with an object that isnt uniformly solid.
According to the math, Titan may very well be filled with liquid!
Or, at least, have a liquid layer of considerable depth beneath its surface. How far below the surface, how deep and exactly what kind of liquid are all speculative at this point its suggested that it may be a subsurface ocean of yet more methane. This would help answer the question of where Titan gets all of its methane in the first place; methane, a.k.a. natural gas is a compound that breaks down quickly in sunlight. In fact, the high-level haze that surrounds the moon like a wispy blue shell is made up of this broken-down methane. So if this stuff is raining down onto the surface in giant, frigid drops and filling streams and lakes, but is still being broken down by ultraviolet light from the Sun to enshroud the entire moon (Titan is BIG, remember at 5,150 km 3,200 miles wide, its over a third the size of Earth!) then there has to be somewhere that this methane is coming from.
If these calculations are right, it may be coming from underground.
"We propose a new Cassini state model for Titan in which we assume the presence of a liquid water ocean beneath an ice shell with the new model, we find a closer agreement between the moment of inertia and the rotation state than for the solid case, strengthening the possibility that Titan has a subsurface ocean." said Rose-Marie Baland et al.
Of course in order for this hypothesis to be proven many more numbers are going to have to be crunched and more data reviewed. And more possibilities considered, too; Titans orbital irregularities may in fact be the result of external forces, such as a close pass by a comet or other large body. Still, theres something to be investigated here and you can bet therell be no shortage of attention on a problem as intriguing as this!
Titan may soon be joining the short list of moons speculated to possess subsurface oceans, alongside Jupiters Europa and Ganymede and sister Saturnian satellite Enceladus
and who knows how many others?
More information: You can download the full report here.
Source: Universe Today
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