Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byGeorgia Cannon Modified over 9 years ago
1
Welcome to the Night Sky Network Cassini Mission Telephone Conference with Dr. Stephen Gillam of JPL! Call Toll Free Number: 1-888-791-1856 anytime after 5:45 p.m. Pacific Time on Wednesday, July 14th You will be asked for the passcode: NIGHT SKY NETWORK You will be asked for the call leader: MICHAEL GREENE You will be asked to give your NAME and the CLUB you belong to. You will be placed on “listen-only”. Conference starts at 6 p.m. Pacific 9 p.m. Eastern For Questions during the conference: Dial: *1 Other questions: nightskyinfo@astrosociety.org
2
Does Titan Have the Recipe for the Primordial Soup? Steve Gillam Cassini Navigation Team Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Thanks to the Cassini Titan Observations Science Team and the the Cassini Outreach Office for the materials presented in this telecon.
4
INTRODUCTION Titan is the largest of Saturn's moons, and is the second largest moon in the solar system. Titan is a complex world more similar to a terrestrial planet than a typical outer planet moon. –Titan's orbit carries it in and out of Saturn's magnetosphere –Its surface is hidden by a thick nitrogen-rich atmosphere –Methane in the atmosphere participates in sunshine-driven chemistry which has produced a photochemical smog –Titan's hidden surface may have exotic features: mountains sculpted by hydrocarbon rain, rivers, lakes and "waterfalls" of flammable liquids –Water and ammonia magma may occasionally erupt, spreading across the surface, creating exotic landscapes
10
Huygens Probe Descent
11
Titan Observations- through time
15
MimasIapetusPhoebeHyperionTitanEnceladusTethysDioneRhea
16
Titan Science Summary 46 Titan flybys –Scattered throughout the tour but 2006 and 2007 are the heaviest –T0 July 1 2004 (350,000 km) flyby – happened hours after SOI –TA Oct of 2004 - first RADAR SAR image –TB Dec of 2004 - ORS flyby –Huygens mission Jan 2005 Mainly ORS observations during the inbound and outbound flyby periods –Closest approach RADAR observations of the surface, –ORS observations of the surface, limb, or upper atmosphere, –Radio Science occultations, –INMS in-situ observations of the atmosphere. 4 broad science themes: –Interior Structure –Surface Characterization –Atmospheric Properties –Magnetospheric Interactions
17
Titan's Cloud Systems
18
Titan Haze
19
Visual an IR Mapping Spectrometer Images of Titans Surface False color image of Titan (right) made up of the red, blue and green images (left). White is methane, green is ice and yellow is hydrocarbons. (Pictures and explanation from the European Space Agency website)
21
Hubble Brightness Map of Titan Map of surface brightness variations on Titan as measured in images taken by NASA/ESA’s Hubble Space Telescope. The colours indicate different surface reflectivities. Deep blue (darkest), deep red (brightest). (From European Space Agency website)
22
SUMMARY THE EXPLORATION OF TITAN IS AT THE VERY HEART OF THE CASSINI / HUYGENS PLANETARY MISSION. TITAN IS THE SOLE FOCUS OF THE HUYGENS PROBE AND ONE OF THE MAIN TARGETS OF THE CASSINI ORBITER. By combining the results from the Cassini mission with Earth-based astronomical observations, laboratory experiments and computer modeling, scientists hope to answer basic questions regarding the origin and evolution of Titan's atmosphere, the nature of the surface, and the structure of its interior.
23
For more information about the Cassini Huygens mission http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov http://www.esa.int/esaCP http://www.esa.int/SPECIALS/Cassini- Huygens/SEM5A6HHZTD_0.html http://saturn.jpl.nasa.govhttp://www.esa.int/esaCP http://www.esa.int/SPECIALS/Cassini- Huygens/SEM5A6HHZTD_0.html
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.