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Titan's Surface Revealed

MattKeeler writes "NASA's running a story on the recent findings of Cassini, the satellite orbiting Titan, one of Saturn's giant moons. New images reveal details of the moon's surface and a variety of materials that cover it."

31 of 169 comments (clear)

  1. Sirens! by spellraiser · · Score: 5, Funny

    I want to see pictures of the Sirens! Where are they??

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  2. Best...comment...EVER! by Big+Nothing · · Score: 4, Funny

    "We're seeing a totally alien surface"

    No shit, Sherlock?

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    1. Re:Best...comment...EVER! by Patrik_AKA_RedX · · Score: 4, Funny

      Here's an ASCII picture of those linear and circular features:

      O | O | X
      -----------
      O | X | 0
      -----------
      X | 0 | X

    2. Re:Best...comment...EVER! by sbaker · · Score: 3, Funny

      So on Titan they play tic-tac-toe with Oh's, X's *and* Zeroes! Boy those guys are just *so* alien - we may never learn to communicate with them.

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  3. Re:Uh, I'm not a regular of this place by tigress · · Score: 3, Funny

    Oh, don't worry. It happens all the time. We consider it a feature. :)

  4. Jack Handy by deutschemonte · · Score: 5, Funny

    What if there was life on Titan and they shot down our probe because they thought it was attacking them with it's scanning technology.

    Then they would send a probe to our moon and scan it with their weapons technology.

    That would suck.

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    1. Re:Jack Handy by l810c · · Score: 4, Funny

      I bet the tin foil hat sales on Titan are through the roof right now.

    2. Re:Jack Handy by Timesprout · · Score: 4, Funny

      In other news the Pentagon confirmed that German intelligence had uncovered evidence of WMD on Titan. The weapons are believed to have been developed by the Titians, a cult cloaked in mystery and understood to have clashed previously with ancient Greek culture. A spokesman said this probably explained the disapperance of Atlantis and that Titan had been moved from position 825 to position 7 on the Places To Be Invaded list. When questioned President Bush had only two words on the matter, "Jelly Babies".

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  5. Woah by mfh · · Score: 3, Interesting

    For a millisecond, I thought I was looking at a picture of an inhabitable world. That's one misleading photo, imho... Not to mention, heavily pixilated.

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    1. Re:Woah by torpor · · Score: 3, Informative


      Titan isn't habitable, you say?

      I thought Titan was one of the reasons hydrothermal vents were so interesting?

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    2. Re:Woah by pyr0 · · Score: 4, Informative
      I believe you are actually thinking of Europa, a moon of Jupiter. It is thought there is an ocean of liquid water beneath the icy crust. Thus, if there are any hydrothermal vents at the bottom of this ocean, there may be life.

      The interest in Titan, as the article points out, is that it is thought to contain a frozen snapshot of pre-life forming compounds similar to what was around in Earth's atmosphere ~4 billion years ago.

    3. Re:Woah by pyr0 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      How is the photo misleading? Also, (moderators) how is this interesting? False-color spectrographic images are pretty standard for this sort of thing. The article clearly states this fact.

  6. Re:Uh, I'm not a regular of this place by Minwee · · Score: 5, Funny

    That's because we all have short attention spans around here. If something is important enough, it gets brought up again and again.

    By the way, did you hear about those pictures from Titan? I can't wait to see them.

  7. Source of life by underpar · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The idea of Titan holding the key to our understanding of pre-life earth has always been interesting, but a little too optimistic.

    I mean, isn't Europa the one that's supposed to develop life?

  8. I love articles like this... by NeoGeo64 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Because I like reading about space exploration, and the fact that NASA's webserver can't be slashdotted.

  9. Cassini is Orbiting SATURN by grondak · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Come on.

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    1. Re:Cassini is Orbiting SATURN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      "NASA's running a story on the recent findings of Cassini, the satellite orbiting Titan, one of Saturn's giant moons. New images reveal details of the moon's surface and a variety of materials that cover it."

      Right, the parent said it. Cassini is orbiting Saturn, and does flybys of Titan. Cassini is on a complicated looping orbit so it can slingshot around the Saturn minisystem and visit the interesting moons.

      Details can be found at:
      http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/operations/saturn- tour. cfm

  10. Re:Dupe?! by Latent+Heat · · Score: 4, Funny
    Last time this story got posted, the thread got clogged with whining about NASA funding, worrying about contaminating Titan, lame Borg jokes, and the general Slashdot name calling.

    This time we will get it right and only post informative and insightful comments regarding what the pictures show and the possibility for life elsewhere than Earth . . . oops, too late.

  11. Re:Just think.. by Lispy · · Score: 3, Funny

    Yeah, or we could call it a dupe. Just like this story. ;-)

  12. Not offtopic by spellraiser · · Score: 5, Informative

    Ok, this is the last time I try to post a literary reference on slashdot. Don't you people read books?

    Check this out. Good book. Read it.

    And stop modding stuff down just because you don't get the reference.

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  13. Impact crater? by bjparker · · Score: 3, Funny

    Note the circular feature, a possible impact crater, in the northern hemisphere.

    That's no impact crater, they've found a Death Star!

  14. Oh shit... by Epistax · · Score: 4, Funny

    I hope they don't see my weed garden.

  15. Re:False-color picture by Ford+Prefect · · Score: 4, Informative

    Too bad this is only a false-color image and has no relation to the colors visible to the human eye.

    There are pictures corresponding to approximately what the human eye would see - kind of boring, and similar to the pictures taken by Voyager 2. The improvement in Cassini's false-colour pictures is due to the use an infra-red camera and some carefully tuned filters, letting the spacecraft peer straight through Titan's distinctly murky atmosphere. This is the breakthrough - it's finally possible to figure out what's under that atmosphere, and at high resolution too!

    The preliminary maps of Titan from Cassini's imagery are already beating the best images taken from Earth - including the astounding images taken from ground-based telescopes by the European Southern Observatory. Interestingly, features on the different maps do match up - which definitely shows that they're real feature, and not random camera artefacts.

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  16. Re:False-color picture by eidolons · · Score: 5, Informative

    To see what Titan looks like we'll have to wait for Cassini to start making its closer fly-bys. I think the article said Cassini will do 45 or so fly-bys in the next 4 years and they'll get to around 600 miles away. That'll allow some very high resolution images of Titan and will be really interesting - this is still too far away to make any really revealing below-atmospheric level observations, as the atmosphere is so opaque and dense.

  17. Legos? by 955301 · · Score: 4, Funny

    ... a variety of materials that cover it.

    So, are there any Legos? Cause, I mean, you can build freakin' anything out of Legos. Life can't be too far behind.

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  18. Re:Titans Cloud. by Chris+Burke · · Score: 4, Informative

    No, they're saying that the cloud of particles following Titan around in its orbit is larger that Saturn and rings. Titan orbits Saturn at about 1.2 million km, and Saturn's rings (and thus presumably the cloud) are about 150 thousand km in radius. So the could isn't surrounding Saturn, it's surrounding Titan and following Titan in its orbit.

    Still pretty neat, there's a giant gas cloud as big as the planet orbiting it.

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  19. Re:Who's to say it isn't inhabitable? by GregChant · · Score: 5, Informative

    Those clouds of gas, as you call them, are believed to be methane, which is supposedly the primary ingredient of its atmosphere. If you could light a match on Titan, the whole moon would be engulfed in fire faster than you could say "who farted?"

    Titan is believed to be one of the most inhospitable worlds in the solar system: I wouldn't go planning your vacation just yet.

    But, to answer your question, from the ESA:
    Diameter (atmosphere): 5550 km
    Diameter (surface): 5150 km
    Mass: 1/45 that of Earth
    Average density: 1.881 times liquid water
    Surface temperature: 94K (-180 degrees C)
    Atmospheric pressure at surface: 1500 mbar (1.5 times Earth's)
    Atmospheric composition: Nitrogen, methane, traces of ammonia, argon, ethane

  20. Re:Who's to say it isn't inhabitable? by aiabx · · Score: 4, Informative

    I wouldn't worry too much about Titan bursting into flames. While there is lots of methane, there isn't very much in the way of oxygen, which you need to burn the methane. If you think about it, if the atmsophere were that explosive, a meteor would have set it off billions of years ago.
    -aiabx

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  21. Landing on Titan by JC_England · · Score: 4, Informative

    The Huygens probe is:

    Made by ESA (The European Space Agency);
    Due for release on Christmas day IIRC;
    Will enter Titan's atmosphere about 21 days later;
    Will live for less than 4 hours while (hopefully) parachuting down to the surface;
    Should give us "ground truth" to compare with all the Cassini remote sensing.

  22. solaris by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Vast, complex hydrocarbon rafts in a methane sea... could we have an embryonic Solaris in our system? Or not so embryonic? These dreams... where do they come from...

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  23. Three times redder than they human eye can see?!?! by sbaker · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "Near-infrared colors, some three times redder than the human eye can see"

    What the fsck does that mean?

    Some of the wavelengths are three times as long as 'Red'?

    Visible 'red' light is around .65 to maybe .75 micrometers. So are they are saying 2.1um or so?

    I do wish these articles would just say what they mean and not try to make it seem more 'amazing' with fuzzy statements like that. It's like "WOW! THREE TIMES REDDER!" - when in fact, near IR is nothing special - most cheap camcorders can take pretty good pictures in that frequency range.

    Ack!

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