Energy News  
Titan's Methane Mystery May Be Solved

The cause for each outgassing episode differed, but the results were the same: "There's an injection of methane into the surface and atmosphere of Titan," Jonathan Lunine said. "We are now in an era where there's enough outgassing to add methane to the atmosphere, but not enough for widespread seas of methane.
by Staff Writers
Nantes, France (SPX) March 1, 2006
An international team of planetary scientists said they may have solved the mystery of why the atmosphere of Saturn's giant moon, Titan, is rich in methane.

Scientists at the University of Nantes and the University of Arizona in Tucson analyzed results from ESA's Huygens probe, which landed on Titan on Jan. 14, 2005, and from remote-sensing instruments on NASA's Cassini spacecraft. They found three major episodes of outgassing during the moon's history that pumped methane into the mostly nitrogen atmosphere.

The presence of atmospheric methane on Titan has been one of the major enigmas the Cassini-Huygens mission to the Saturnian system has been trying to resolve. Methane, which on Titan plays a role similar to water on Earth, is locked in methane-rich water ice that forms a crust above an ocean of liquid water mixed with ammonia.

When the Huygens probe warmed Titan's damp surface where it landed, its instruments inhaled whiffs of methane. The heat of the probe caused methane trapped in pores just below the surface to evaporate, just as subsurface water would evaporate on Earth if something heated the sand of a dry streambed.

Scientists have long known that Titan's atmosphere contains methane, ethane, acetylene and many other hydrocarbon compounds. The problem with methane is sunlight destroys it after tens of millions of years, so something has replenished the gas in Titan's thick air during its 4.5 billion-year history - leading some scientists to speculate there could be organic processes at work on the moon's surface.

Based on the Cassini-Huygens data, however, the team found a release of methane happened after Titan formed its dense rock core and water mantle beneath an ice crust. The first release was aided by ammonia acting as an anti-freeze, heat leftover from formation, and heat from radioactive elements, explained Arizona's Jonathan Lunine, an interdisciplinary scientist for the Huygens probe.

Much of the methane in this first release might have been reabsorbed into Titan's interior, Lunine continued, but whatever was left in the atmosphere had to have been photochemically destroyed during the first billion years.

The second methane-release episode occurred around 2 billion years ago, the team reports in the March 2 issue of the journal Nature. "The core, made of rock, continued to heat up because it contains natural radioactive elements, like uranium, potassium and thorium," Lunine said. "On Earth, these elements are concentrated in the crust, but on Titan, they'd be deep down in the rock. So the core gets hotter and hotter, until finally it's soft enough for convection to start."

Convection is the mechanical turnover of material to remove heat. The second event injected a burst of convection heat into Titan's overlying mantle, causing the ice crust to thin and methane to pour through the ice to the surface.

The latest methane-release episode began around 500 million years ago, again the result of convection in Titan's solid ice crust.

The cause for each outgassing episode differed, but the results were the same: "There's an injection of methane into the surface and atmosphere of Titan," Lunine said. "We are now in an era where there's enough outgassing to add methane to the atmosphere, but not enough for widespread seas of methane."

The scientists are confident the latest outgassing episode will be Titan's last. "There'll be no further such events until billions of years in the future, when the Sun goes red giant and cooks Titan," Lunine explained. "Methane outgassing will cease within the next few hundred million years. Then photochemistry will destroy the surface methane and Titan will indeed dry up. The atmosphere will clear of haze, and Titan will look very different."

Lunine's co-authors were Gabriel Tobie and Christophe Sotin of the University of Nantes. Lunine currently is on sabbatical at the Italian National Astrophysics Institute in Rome.

Community
Email This Article
Comment On This Article

Related Links
ESA
Cassini-Huygens
Explore The Ring World of Saturn and her moons
Jupiter and its Moons
The million outer planets of a star called Sol
News Flash at Mercury



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Cassini Captures Saturn F Ring
Pasadena CA (SPX) Feb 28, 2006
The Cassini spacecraft has captured an image revealing structure in Saturn's narrow and complex F ring, including one of the faint strands that seems to curl around the planet in a tight, rotating spiral. Scientists think the spiral structure might be due to disturbance of micron-sized F-ring particles by a tiny moon - or moons.







  • Running A French Farm On Rapeseed Oil And Manure
  • Portugal Gets Four Bids In Wind Farm Tender
  • Managing Coal Combustion Residues In Mines
  • Japanese firms scrap plan for coal-fired power plant

  • Problems persist 20 years after Chernobyl
  • Russia Revives International Nuclear Waste Depot Plan
  • Baltic Prime Ministers Back Construction Of New Nuclear Plant
  • Outside View: The Future's Nuclear

  • Advanced Aircraft to Probe Hazardous Atmospheric Whirlwinds
  • UND-NASA DC-8 Flies Second Mission From Grand Forks With New Experiments
  • Asian NOx Boost North American Ozone Levels
  • Yale To Study Atmospheric 'Tsunamis'4

  • Corruption Destroying Largest Asia-Pacific Forest
  • Saving Tropical Forests: Will Europe's "Jack" fell Asia's "Giant"
  • Researchers, Others To Explore Nanotechnology And Forest Products
  • European Union Donates 38M Euros To Africa's Forests

  • UMaine Researcher Puts New Date On Early Agriculture
  • Middle Class India Joins Global Organic Food Wave
  • Hooked On Fishing, And We're Heading For The Bottom
  • Reproducing Amazon Soils Could Boost Fertility And Scrub Carbon

  • MIT Powers Up New Battery For Hybrid Cars
  • Volkswagen And Google Team Up To Explore Future Vehicle Nav Systems
  • NASA Technology Featured In New Anti-Icing Windshield Spray
  • Eclectic Koizumi Tries Electric Sedan

  • Boeing Completes P-8A Weapons Separation Wind Tunnel Tests
  • French Plant To Cash In On Aircraft Recycling Boom
  • ST And Adams Partner For Very Light Jet And Piston Aircraft
  • Lockheed Martin F-35 Takes Shape, Readies For First Flight

  • Could NASA Get To Pluto Faster? Space Expert Says Yes - By Thinking Nuclear
  • NASA plans to send new robot to Jupiter
  • Los Alamos Hopes To Lead New Era Of Nuclear Space Tranportion With Jovian Mission
  • Boeing Selects Leader for Nuclear Space Systems Program

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement