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n2doc

(47,953 posts)
Thu Dec 12, 2013, 08:07 PM Dec 2013

NASA's Cassini Spacecraft Reveals Clues About Saturn Moon Titan



This colorized mosaic from NASA's Cassini mission shows the most complete view yet of Titan's northern land of lakes and seas. Saturn's moon Titan is the only world in our solar system other than Earth that has stable liquid on its surface. The liquid in Titan's lakes and seas is mostly methane and ethane. Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASI/USGS


December 12, 2013

NASA's Cassini spacecraft is providing scientists with key clues about Saturn's moon Titan, and in particular, its hydrocarbon lakes and seas.

Titan is one of the most Earth-like places in the solar system, and the only place other than our planet that has stable liquid on its surface.

Cassini's recent close flybys are bringing into sharper focus a region in Titan's northern hemisphere that sparkles with almost all of the moon's seas and lakes. Scientists working with the spacecraft's radar instrument have put together the most detailed multi-image mosaic of that region to date. The image includes all the seas and most of the major lakes. Some of the flybys tracked over areas that previously were seen at a different angle, so researchers have been able to create a flyover of the area around Titan's largest and second largest seas, known as Kraken Mare and Ligeia Mare, respectively, and some of the nearby lakes.

"Learning about surface features like lakes and seas helps us to understand how Titan's liquids, solids and gases interact to make it so Earth-like," said Steve Wall, acting radar team lead at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. "While these two worlds aren't exactly the same, it shows us more and more Earth-like processes as we get new views."

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http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?release=2013-364&rn=news.xml&rst=3985
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NASA's Cassini Spacecraft Reveals Clues About Saturn Moon Titan (Original Post) n2doc Dec 2013 OP
Can you imagine the life that may exist in those lakes? longship Dec 2013 #1

longship

(40,416 posts)
1. Can you imagine the life that may exist in those lakes?
Thu Dec 12, 2013, 09:14 PM
Dec 2013

It certainly would not be like earth life. If it exists and is not based on DNA, that would be awesome.

We should send another probe down to the surface and find out (just as long as it doesn't light any mathes to see what it's doing).

Couldn't help speculating wildly.

on edit: oh, and BTW, I think the Cassini Mission is one the greatest ever by humans.
R&K

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