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Clouds in the Tropics of Titan Emily Schaller Lunar and Planetary Laboratory, University of Arizona 2010 Hubble Fellows Symposium
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Titan Thick atmosphere with surface pressure ~1.5 bar. Major gases in atmosphere: N 2,(~98%) CH 4 (~2%) 27 degree obliquity 16 day rotation period
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Phase diagram of water http://www.lsbu.ac.uk/water/phase.html T E
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Phase diagram of methane T Gas Solid Liquid Credit: H. Roe
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Narrowband imaging Adaptive optics at Keck 10-m Gemini 8-m
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Typical Titan images: 2001- 2005 Schaller et al. 2006
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Mean daily insolation on Titan
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Mitchell et al. 2006 PNAS Models of Titan Cloud Activity with season Present Rannou et al. 2006 Science
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Surface maps 0 West Longitude Latitude Credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute x Cassini ISS Surface Map
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Dry Tropics (dunes) – cloud-free Wet poles (lakes, rivers, other fluvial features) – lots of clouds Images from: saturn.jpl.nasa.gov & Radebaugh et al. 2008,
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But… small-scale surface features seen by Huygens probe near equator show evidence for rainfall http://www.esa.int/SPECIALS/Cassini-Huygens/index.html
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IRTF spectroscopic monitoring Disk integrated spectra of Titan covering 0.8-2.4 microns with a resolution of 375 Data taken every night SpeX instrument is on the telescope Disk integrated spectra: –total fractional cloud coverage –cloud altitudes –Interrupt at Gemini to determine latitudes
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IRTF Spectral Data surfacetropospherestratosphere Relative Flux
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2.03 micron flux 0 15% IRTF ISS Surface Map -15% Schaller et al. 2010 submitted
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IRTF Spectral Data Spectra deviate at <2.12 microns indicating extremely low <0.15% tropospheric cloud activity in 90% of all nights Relative Flux Spectra deviate at <2.12 microns indicating extremely low <0.15% tropospheric cloud activity in 95% of all nights
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Typical Titan images: 2001- 2005 Schaller et al. 2006
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Titan Images: 2005-2008
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Schaller et al. Nature 2009 IRTF Spectrum
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Schaller et al. Nature 2009 Cassini Titan flybys (March 31, May 20) completely missed event
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Tropical Clouds Two days after initial large tropical cloud, clouds also appeared near the south pole Simple calculations reveal that a Rossby (planetary) wave would take ~2 earth days to reach the south pole Rossby waves trigger clouds by forming areas of low pressure Schaller et al. Nature 2009
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Tropical Clouds - tie to the surface? 15S, 250W contains a small cloud in in all images for 20 days. Surface heating/methane injection at this location? Great place for Cassini to look for potential cryovolcanism or surface changes due to methane rainout Schaller et al. Nature 2009
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Conclusions Locations and intensities of Titan’s clouds vary significantly with season Tropical clouds do occasionally form on Titan Clouds can form via teleconnections mediated by large-scale waves Large cloud events may be caused by increased methane humidity, surface heating, or other factors Observations of Titan’s clouds over the next few years by Cassini and ground- based observations will provide the key for interpreting the origin and evolution of the fluvial surface features.
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