NASA creates the first topographic map of Titan, Saturn’s largest moon

DNP NASA creates the first topographic map of Titan, Saturn's largest moon

Scientists observing Saturn’s moon Titan with NASA’s Cassini spacecraft have boldly gone where no man has gone before — visually, anyway. Using radar imagery collected from nine years of Cassini flybys, researchers were able to patch together the first global topographic map of Titan, published in the July 2013 issue of Icarus. Ralph Lorenz, a member of the Cassini radar team at Johns Hopkins, said, “Titan has so much interesting activity — like flowing liquids and moving sand dunes — but to understand these processes it’s useful to know how the terrain slopes.” In particular, understanding the moon’s terrain can reveal a lot about its dynamic climate system. Like Earth, Titan’s atmosphere is composed primarily of nitrogen, but the liquids and vapors on the moon’s surface are made of methane and other organic chemicals integral to the creation of complex life. By studying the relationship between atmosphere and terrain, researchers hope to learn more about the evolution of life in its earliest stages, and inspire curious minds to turn their eyes toward Titan.

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Via: Space

Source: Icarus

Visualized: Space hurricane! NASA’s Cassini records super cyclone on Saturn (video)

Visualized Space hurricane! NASA's Cassini records super cyclone on Saturn video

If the crashing sound of lightning striking Saturn wasn’t enough to excite your inner-meteorologist, then perhaps footage of a raging extraterrestrial hurricane will win you over. After orbiting the ringed planet for nine years, NASA’s Cassini probe has managed to snag video of a super storm on the celestial body’s north pole. Cloaked by the darkness of winter, the hurricane’s eye became visible as Saturn’s northern hemisphere transitioned into spring. Unlike the tropical cyclones of Earth (see: Hurricane Katrina, Sandy and Irene), this furious typhoon has been spinning for several years and has winds that flow at speeds exceeding 300MPH. Further differentiating itself from our world’s whirlwinds, this alien cyclone is locked to its planet’s north pole and is fueled by small amounts of water vapor instead of an actual ocean. Completely in a category of its own, the hurricane’s eye measures about 1,250 miles wide and is surrounded by fluffy white clouds the size of Texas. To see this Saturnian fury in all its glory, check out the video after the break and feel free to leave your gratuitous hurricane names in the comments below.

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Source: NASA

Alt-week 12.15.12: rivers on Titan, electric handcuffs and crashing into the moon

Alt-week takes a look at the best science and alternative tech stories from the last seven days.

Altweek 121512 rivers on Titan, electric handcuffs and crashing into the moon

Space, it’s the final frontier, where no-one can hear you scream in frustration at not knowing who the villain of Star Trek: Into Darkness is, as well as where 50 percent of our stories take place this week. NASA’s planning to crash satellites into the moon, someone’s patented an electo-shock handcuff and there’s a river on Titan that you wouldn’t want to canoe-down. This is alt-week.

Continue reading Alt-week 12.15.12: rivers on Titan, electric handcuffs and crashing into the moon

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Stare Into the Eye of Saturn’s Terrifying Polar Vortex

If you think the weather looks set to be bad over the winter, thank yourself lucky you’re not caught up in Saturn’s polar vortex. More »

Cassini spacecraft spies massive vortex on Titan

NASA’s Cassini spacecraft took a photo during a flyby of a massive vortex on Saturn’s moon Titan. The photograph was taken on June 27 this year and released this week. The massive milky cloud shown in the image is a South polar vortex on the surface of Titan. The vortex is a mass of swirling gas around the pole of the atmosphere on the moon.

NASA says that the high-altitude haze in the vortex at the South Pole signals that the seasons are changing on Saturn’s largest moon. The first sign of haze starting to concentrate over the moon’s south pole were noted in March. The image you see above is a true color image taken in visible light.

NASA says that the vortex is similar to open cellular convection often seen over the oceans here on earth. However, on earth these layers are just above the surface of the ocean and on Titan, the vortex is a very high-altitude, about 200 miles above the surface of moon’s South Pole. The scientists believe that the vortex could be a response of Titan’s stratosphere to seasonal cooling, but that is unconfirmed.


Cassini spacecraft spies massive vortex on Titan is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
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