Title: Does Titan Have an Ocean
1Does Titan Have an Ocean? Darren
Baird ESS-298 December 2, 2004
2Detection of Titans Atmosphere
- Gaseous methane atmosphere discovered by Kuiper
in 1944 - Subsequently, additional hydrocarbons detected
- Presence of methane led to suggestions of surface
layer of methane snow, ice, or liquid - 4.5 B.Y. of methane photolysis could cover
surface with 1 km of photochemical debris - Others visualized the surface being coated with
tar or gasoline
3Observations from Voyager I
- Defined atmospheric properties sufficiently to
postulate existence of a deep hydrocarbon ocean - Radio science occultation experiments fixed the
temperature profile of the atmosphere - Methane mole fraction (0.7) in nitrogen
dominated surface - Surface temperatures constrained to 92.5 - 101 K
- UV spectrometer identified nitrogen in upper
atmosphere - IRIS experiment identified a suite of
hydrocarbons and nitrile emission features in
stratosphere - Methane, ethane, acetylene, and propane are
abundant - Supersaturation of latter 3 constituents at
tropopause forms haze
4Salient Deductions from Voyager Data
- Ethane and propane are liquid at ambient surface
temperature, while acetylene and others are solid - Ethane flux is 5x greater than acetylene flux
- Solid acetylene more dense than liquid ethane, so
surface deposit accumulated over age of solar
system expected to be a liquid layer with
sediments toward the bottom - Methane lost by photolysis - must be a
regeneration source - Reservoir of pure methane at surface is a logical
choice, but resulting saturated conditions in
lower atmosphere inconsistent with Voyager I
radio science occultation temperature profile - Mixed methane-ethane ocean consistent with the
temperature profiles - Global ocean would have to be greater than 0.7 km
on basis of accumulated amounts of ethane over
the age of the solar system
5Effects of Tidal Dissipation
- Titans eccentricity is relatively high (0.03)
- Not maintained by resonances with other
satellites - Dissipative processes decrease eccentricity over
time - If k2 assumed to be 0.2 based on rigidity of
water ice and t assumed to be age of solar system - Q gt 200 for eccentricity to be maintained over
age of solar system - Requires a global ocean gt 400 m deep!
- Large basins can enhance tidal evolution
- Water-ammonia liquids could be present in the
interior - Interior could be highly dissipative
6Radiometry at cm Wavelengths
- Measure thermal flux and compare to inferred
kinetic temperature - Brightness temperature measured to be 80.4 0.6
K, higher than all Galilean satellites except
Callisto - Emissivity of Titan measured to be 0.81 - 0.90
- For a global methane/ethane ocean, e 0.93 with
dielectric constant of 1.6 - 1.8 - Observed e of 0.81 - 0.90 consistent with a
dielectric constant of 2.3 - 3.5 - Emissivity has little or no variation with
orbital phase - Understanding low emissivities of Ganymede and
Europa and how they compare with the high
emissivities of Callisto and Titan requires
consideration of radar data
7Radar Used to Understand Global Emissivities
- Large radar cross sections seen on Titan present
a mystery - A liquid hydrocarbon ocean would dissolve
significant amounts of complex hydrocarbons and
nitrile aerosols, but NOT enough to explain cross
sections gt10. - Hydrocarbon ocean containing bubbles of
atmosphere (a frothy ocean) could have a radar
cross section of 15, within error bars of
observed radar cross sections. - Potentially consistent with radio brightness
temperature
8More Results/Mysteries from Radar and Radiometry
Data
- Ganymede, Europa, and Callisto exhibit large
radar cross sections that reflect most of the
signal in same sense of polarization as delivered - Titan has opposite sense polarization except at
bright spot - Most of Titans surface NOT like Callisto despite
similar cross section and e - Most of the surface is consistent with a number
of different materials (perhaps solid organic and
nitrile polymers and maybe an ocean of polar
aerosol polymers) - --gt Titans surface inconsistent with global
exposure of water ice and a pure global
ethane-methane ocean - Possibilities include dirty water ice, layers of
solid organics and nitriles, or an ethane-methane
ocean with reflective contaminants
9Cassini Radar Data
- Dark regions may represent areas that are smooth,
made of radar-absorbing materials, or are sloped
away from the direction of illumination. - Lower (southern) edges of the features are
brighter, consistent with the structure being
raised above the relatively featureless darker
background - Possibly a cryovolcanic flow, where water-rich
liquid has welled up from Titan's warm interior - Area in image 150 km square, centered at 45
north, in area not yet imaged optically
Image courtesy of NASA/JPL
10Near Infrared Spectrophotometry
- Windows exist in the near IR, between methane
bands, through which data on surface can be
obtained - Surface albedo varies inversely with wavelength
- Pure liquid ethane/methane layer would produce
albedo lt0.02 across all bands - Water ice experiences increasing albedo with
decreasing l, but it is too bright to match the
data - Surface layer of mixed water ice and hydrocarbons
match data - A pure, global hydrocarbon ocean can be ruled out
safely
11Estimating Depth of Hydrocarbon Ocean
- Radar and spectrophotometry data do NOT rule out
possibility of seas of ethane/methane - Depth estimates driven by estimate of accumulated
amount of liquid ethane over age of solar system - Photochemical models attempt to reproduce
stratospheric ethane column abundance from
Voyager I IRIS data - Ocean depth as low as 300 m can be contemplated,
which would be restricted to low-lying basins
- Subsurface hydrocarbon oceans proposed
- Contained in porous ice regolith or cracks
- 1-km deep regolith sufficient to store 200
m deep global ocean - Clathrate model could store large amounts of
methane in aquifer - How could ethane move to subsurface?
- Impact stirring
- Circulation of fluids in porous media near surface
Lunine 1993
12Cassini Infrared Data from Titan Flyby
2.0 ?m
2.8 ?m
5.0 ?m
- Change in albedo at various wavelengths can be
caused by absorption by gases, variations in haze
or cloud opacity, or because of a change in
surface albedo
Image courtesy of NASA/JPL/ University of
Arizona/ USGS
13Summary of Possible Titan Surface Models and
Constraints
14References
- Campbell, Donald B. Radar Evidence for Liquid
Surfaces on Titan. Science 302 (2003) 431-434. - De Pater, Imke. Introduction to Special Section
Titan Pre-Cassini view. Geophysical Research
Letters 31, (2004). - Dermott, Stanley F., and C. Sagan. Tidal Effects
of Disconnected Hydrocarbon Seas on Titan.
Nature 374 (1995) 238-240. - Flasar, F.M. Oceans on Titan? Science 221 (July
1983) 55-57. - Griffith, Caitlin A., Tobias Owen, and Richard
Wagener. Titan Surface and troposphere,
Investigated with Ground-Based Near-Infrared
Observations. Icarus 93 (1991) 362-378. - Lorenz, Ralph D. , and J. Lunine Titans Surface
Reviewed the Nature of Bright and Dark Terrain.
Planetary Space Science 45, 8 (1997) 981-992 - Lunine, Jonathan I. Does Titan Have an Ocean? A
Review of the Current Understanding of Titans
Surface. Reviews of Geophysics 31, 2 (May 1993)
133-149. - Ori, Gian Gabriele, et al. Fluid Dynamics of
Liquids on Titans Surface. Planetary Space
Science 46, 9/10 (1998) 1417-1421. - Sears, William D. Tidal Dissipation in Oceans on
Titan. Icarus 113 (1995) 39-56. - http//photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA06993
- http//photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA06405
15Backup Slide
- Alternate sources of methane
- Volcanism from interior
- Upper mantle may contain large amounts of methane
- Stored as clathrate hydrate or in crustal
aquifer-like system - If surface reservoir exists, it is mixed with
more ethane over time - Exogenic supply by impacts
- Not enough methane to be sole re-generation
mechanism - Freezing point of ethane and methane is 91 K,
close to surface temperature - Eutectic minimum melting point at
72K for 0.7 mole
fraction of methane - Dissolved nitrogen lowers freezing
point well below
surface temperatures
even for methane-rich models