The Astrobiology Web · About Us · Advertising · Contact Us · Comments Thursday, September 2, 2010    
 

The Astrobiology Web, Your Guide to the Living Universe
Home | Calendar - News - Gallery - Space Directory - Station Guide - Space Weather

Mars News | SpaceRef - Astrobiology Web - Pop-up News
PRESS RELEASE
Date Released: Wednesday, July 19, 2006
Source: University of Arizona

NASA Cassini Radar Reveals Earth-like Land on Titan

image

High resolution image

New radar images from NASA's Cassini spacecraft reveal geological features very similar to Earth on an Australia-size, bright region on Saturn's moon Titan.

In one radar strip over 4,500 kilometers (2,796 miles) long, Cassini provided a virtual goldmine, telling the region's complex geological story.

Radar images show that the region, named Xanadu, is surrounded by darker terrain, reminiscent of a free-standing landmass. At the western edge of Xanadu, dark sand dunes give way to land cut by river networks, hills and valleys. These narrow river networks flow onto darker areas, which may be lakes. A crater formed by the impact of an asteroid or by water volcanism is visible. More channels snake through the eastern part of Xanadu, ending on a dark plain where dunes, abundant elsewhere, seem absent. Mountains, roughly the height of the Appalachian Mountains, crisscross Xanadu.

"We could only speculate about the nature of this mysterious bright country, too far from us for details to be revealed by Earth-based and space-based telescopes. Now, under Cassini's powerful radar eyes, facts are replacing speculation," said Dr. Jonathan Lunine, Cassini interdisciplinary scientist at the University of Arizona, Tucson. "Surprisingly, this cold, faraway region has geological features remarkably like Earth."

Titan is a place of twilight, dimmed by a haze of hydrocarbons surrounding it. The radar instrument can see through the haze to the surface. It bounces radio signals off Titan's surface and times their return. In radar images, bright regions indicate rough or scattering material, while a dark region might be smoother or more absorbing material, possibly liquid.

Xanadu was first discovered by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope in 1994 as a striking bright spot seen in infrared imaging. When Cassini's radar system viewed Xanadu on April 30, 2006, it found a surface modified by winds, rain, and the flow of liquids. At Titan's frigid temperatures, the liquid cannot be water; it must be methane or ethane.

"Although Titan gets far less sunlight and is much smaller and colder than Earth, Xanadu is no longer just a mere bright spot, but a land where rivers flow down to a sunless sea," said Lunine.

Observations by the European Space Agency's Huygens probe that Cassini carried to Titan, and by NASA's Voyager spacecraft strongly hint that both methane rain and dark orange hydrocarbon solids fall like soot from Titan's dark skies. On bright Xanadu, liquid methane might fall as rain or trickle from springs. Rivers of methane might carve Xanadu's channels and carry off grains of material to accumulate as sand dunes elsewhere on Titan.

"This land is heavily tortured, convoluted and filled with hills and mountains," said Dr. Steve Wall, the Cassini radar team's deputy leader at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. "There appear to be faults, deeply cut channels and valleys. Also, it appears to be the only vast area not covered by organic dirt. Xanadu has been washed clean. What is left underneath looks like very porous water ice, maybe filled with caverns."

"In the 1980s, it took the Shuttle Imaging Radar to discover subsurface rivers in the Sahara. Similarly, if it hadn't been for the Cassini radar, we would have missed all of this. We have a newly discovered continent to explore, just like the early explorers of America," said Wall.

Cassini will view Titan on July 22, this time exploring the high northern latitudes. In the next two years the orbiter will fly by Titan 29 times, nearly twice as many encounters as in the first half of Cassini's four-year prime mission. Twelve of the planned flybys will use radar.

For images and more information, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/cassini and http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov

The Cassini-Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, the European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency. The Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, manages the Cassini-Huygens mission for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington.

Science Contact Information

Jonathan Lunine, UA, 520-621-2789 jlunine@lpl.arizona.edu

Media Contact Information

Dwayne Brown/Erica Hupp NASA HQ, Washington 202-358-1226/1237

Carolina Martinez Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. 818-354-9382

Find educational astronomy software at Nameastarlive.com


News from Commercial Space Watch

- Globalstar Takes Delivery of Three Additional Satellites From Thales Alenia Space as it Prepares for October Launch

- NASA KSC Award: Life-Like Robot

- Letter to Rep. Gordon Regarding House Science Committee Authorization Bill As It Relates to NASA

- ATK and NASA Successfully Test the Second Five-Segment Ares Development Motor (DM-2)

- ARES Corporation Named NASA Dryden Flight Research Center Small Business Subcontractor of the Year

- Masten Space Systems Wins NASA Suborbital Contract

- Ball Aerospace Wins Contract to Build WorldView-3 for DigitalGlobe

- NASA's New Building Receives Gold Certification for Going Green

- NASA Awards Raytheon $120 Million Contract

- James Cameron Hosts The ZERO-G Experience

- NASA Glenn Tests Alternative Green Rocket Engine

- NASA Advisory Council Commercial Space Committee Meeting 14 Sep 2010

- Summoning the Future By Remembering the Past

- NASTAR Center and Special Aerospace Services Commence Research Study on Emergency Detection and Human Response of Atlas V Profile

- NASA MSFC RFI: Electrodynamic Tether Propulsion Demonstration Mission

- Play classic casino games online at Kerching Casino. Sign up for a 100% bonus and start p

- Always play bingo with recommended sites.

-

- online bingo latest online bingo game reviews, bonuses and bingo news

-


advertisment

Recent Press Releases

Ancient microbes responsible for breathing life into ocean 'deserts'

Geologists revisit the Great Oxygenation Event

Looking for the Coolest Forms of Life on Earth

NASA Scientists to Share Ideas at SETIcon Gathering

Orion Nebula Gives Clues to Origin of Life on Earth

NASA Reveals Key to Unlock Mysterious Red Glow in Space

'Benford Beacons' Mark New Approach to Find Frugal Aliens

Expedition to Mid-Cayman Rise identifies unusual variety of deep sea vents

Zapping Titan-like Atmosphere with UV Creates Life Precursors

NASA's Des Marais Elected Fellow of the American Academy of Microbiology

Super-Complex Organic molecules Found in Interstellar Space

NASA Scientists Dive Deep to Learn More About Life on the Moon, Mars

Hunting for Fossils on Europa

NASA Narrows Selection of Fundamental Space Biology Missions

Could Life Survive on Mars? Yes, Expert Says

Looking for great prices on Burton Snowboards? Visit PortersTahoe.com

mortgage web site design


Home | Calendar - News - Gallery - Space Directory - Space Station Guide

SpaceRef - SpaceRef Asia - SpaceRef Canada - SpaceRef Europe - Astrobiology - Moon Today - Mars TV
Commercial Space Watch - Mars Today - Jupiter Today - Saturn Today - Space Elevator - Space Wire - Nano2Sol

Astrobiology Web Copyright © 1999-2010 SpaceRef Interactive Inc. All rights reserved. Privacy Policy