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Cassini's First Glimpses Of Titan

Cassini's first image of Titan showing detail.

Boulder (SPX) May 07, 2004
The veils of Saturn's most mysterious moon have begun to lift in Cassini's eagerly awaited, first glimpse of the surface of Titan, a world where scientists believe organic matter rains from hazy skies and seas of liquid hydrocarbons dot a frigid surface.

Titan, a major target of interest for the Cassini orbiter, and the destination of its piggybacked, European-built Huygens probe, may hold clues to Earth's hydrological cycle, its greenhouse effect, and even the origins of life.

Images returned in mid-April by NASA's Saturn-bound Cassini spacecraft, showing features previously observed only in Earth-based telescopes, have imaging scientists excited and optimistic about the prospects for a successful upcoming exploration of the haze-enshrouded moon that has intrigued planet-watchers for decades.

Titan, nearly the size of Mercury at 5,100 kilometers (3,200 miles) across, is the largest single expanse of unexplored terrain remaining in the solar system today.

The Titan-viewing geometry presently available to Cassini on its approach to Saturn is not optimal. Nonetheless, surface features on the moon several hundred kilometers (a couple of hundred miles) across are apparent. Over the next two months, features as small as 44 kilometers (28 miles) should become visible.

"This is our first moment of reckoning," said Dr. Carolyn Porco, leader of the imaging team and director of the Cassini Imaging Central Laboratory for Operations (CICLOPS) at the Space Science Institute in Boulder, Colo.

"The mere fact that we can see the surface at all with just some rudimentary image processing, when the geometry for surface viewing is not the most favorable, says that in a very short time, we can rightfully expect to see sights on Titan that have never been seen before by anyone."

John Barbara, an imaging team associate and scientific analyst at NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York, is interested in detecting clouds in the lower Titan atmosphere and measuring their motions. Seeing near-surface clouds through the hazy Titan atmosphere carries the same challenges as seeing the surface.

"At this stage in the game, to discern large-scale surface features is really quite exciting', he said. 'It's a wonderful indication that, if there are large cloud systems near the Titan surface, we will likely see them."

The next test will come on July 2, when the spacecraft makes a 350,000 kilometer (217,500 mile) approach to Titan over its south pole, offering the possibility, but not the certainty, of seeing features as small as a few kilometers.

"Although we can see large-scale surface contrasts through even a thick haze, the small-scale features can only be seen if the haze is thin," said Dr. Robert West, Cassini imaging team member and an atmospheric scientist at JPL.

"So we don't yet know if or how well we will be able to see fine details on the surface. But we will know for sure on July 2, and if we are successful, a whole new world will be opened to us."

Titan may have familiar geological constructs like mountains, canyons, craters, rivers, lakes, cataracts, wind-blown waves, shorelines, snow fields and other terrestrial-like features.

But because of the frozen temperatures and the very un-Earthlike materials on its icy surface and in its atmosphere, scientists are expecting the unexpected.

"The next few months will read like an episode from Star Trek," said Porco. "It will be exploration at its finest and is precisely why we came."

Cassini is scheduled to arrive in orbit around Saturn on June 30 PDT.

Related Links
Cassini-Huygens at JPL
Cassini Imaging Central Laboratory for Operations
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Saturn All Up By Cassini One Last Time
Boulder - Apr 30, 2004
Saturn and its rings completely fill the field of view of Cassini's narrow angle camera in this natural color image taken on March 27, 2004.







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