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T19 (October 9, 2006)
Guest_AlexBlackwell_*
post Oct 4 2006, 10:52 PM
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The mission description document is now online (1.1 Mb PDF).
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volcanopele
post Oct 12 2006, 10:53 PM
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Two cutouts from Monday's T19 Titan flyby show more lakes in the north polar region. In "Lakes and more lakes", methane and ethane have filled eroded river valleys, creating lakes that resemble Lake Powell and Lake Mead in the Southwest United States. In the second released cutout, Titan's Great Lakes?, several lakes appear to be have drainage channels, allowing methane from through the region to flow into the two large lakes at the top of the strip.


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JRehling
post Oct 12 2006, 11:36 PM
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QUOTE (volcanopele @ Oct 12 2006, 03:53 PM) *
Two cutouts from Monday's T19 Titan flyby show more lakes in the north polar region. In "Lakes and more lakes", methane and ethane have filled eroded river valleys, creating lakes that resemble Lake Powell


Before I finished reading your sentence, I clicked on that link, and thought, "Hey, that's Lake Powell!"
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volcanopele
post Oct 13 2006, 12:06 AM
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In the "Titan's Great Lakes?" image, you can see channels that discharge into large lakes at the top of the frame. I've highlighted some of the channels in the attachment below, in red. I've also highlight the flood plain of the main channel:

Attached Image


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tty
post Oct 13 2006, 06:16 AM
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QUOTE (volcanopele @ Oct 13 2006, 12:53 AM) *
Two cutouts from Monday's T19 Titan flyby show more lakes in the north polar region. In "Lakes and more lakes", methane and ethane have filled eroded river valleys, creating lakes that resemble Lake Powell and Lake Mead in the Southwest United States. In the second released cutout, Titan's Great Lakes?, several lakes appear to be have drainage channels, allowing methane from through the region to flow into the two large lakes at the top of the strip.



Here on Earth coastlines looking like that would be interpreted as being the result of water recently invading river valley systems and not yet having had time to modify the morphology.
Lake Mead or Lake Powell as you say, or a transgressive "Ria" coast like parts of England or Ireland, or the Carolinas inside the sand barrier.
Is it methane flooding season on Titan?

tty
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Thorsten
post Oct 13 2006, 12:11 PM
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Wow! The cutouts from this radar pass are not only scientifically interesting, but also of incredible scenic beauty!
(At the risk of doing something quite silly, I have attached an artistic interpretation of one of these north polar channels, meandering over miles and miles through a hilly landscape with deeply cut valleys or wide floodplains and finally draining into a good-sized lake. (The human observer to the left is purely speculative)).
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ugordan
post Oct 13 2006, 12:16 PM
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QUOTE (Thorsten @ Oct 13 2006, 01:11 PM) *
The human observer to the left is purely speculative

Isn't he also Chinese? wink.gif


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climber
post Oct 13 2006, 12:37 PM
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QUOTE (Thorsten @ Oct 13 2006, 02:11 PM) *
Wow! The cutouts from this radar pass are not only scientifically interesting, but also of incredible scenic beauty!
(At the risk of doing something quite silly, I have attached an artistic interpretation of one of these north polar channels, meandering over miles and miles through a hilly landscape with deeply cut valleys or wide floodplains and finally draining into a good-sized lake. (The human observer to the left is purely speculative)).

I don't know how "others" behave but, I personaly need to see a representation of what spacecrafts "see", either in visible light or IR or UV ..or Radar. Some people here are VERY good to create pictures from those spacecrafts data, some put some poetry inside those pictures, some show Earth scenary that remind them what they see on other planets, and some others post artistics representations (as you say). All deserve the same THANKS for helping our brains to get a sense of the reality, even if only a sense. So, thank you Thorsten, you know you're not SO far in the representation of what Titan looks like.


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ngunn
post Oct 13 2006, 02:00 PM
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I am still seeing details within the darkest parts of these images. Could somebody (volcanopele?) please indicate the outlines of the areas you think are actually standing liquid surfaces at the time of imaging?

Thorsten there is nothing at all silly about your line drawing - keep them coming.
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ugordan
post Oct 13 2006, 02:16 PM
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It's plain to see which areas in the RADAR images are much darker. The fact that we're seeing details in those regions as well could simply indicate the lakes are shallow so we actually get a radar reflection off the bottom. Remember the radar beam penetrates through liquids fairly well, only a substantially deep lake would give back very little echo -- probably several meters in depth.


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Thorsten
post Oct 13 2006, 03:01 PM
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A similar conclusion was reached in the case of the “Kissing Lakes” (PIA08740).
Lighter patches in one of the lakes were considered as an indication that this lake is shallower, with radar signals penetrating through the liquid and reflecting off the lakebed.

http://www.newscientistspace.com/article.n...line-news_rss20
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volcanopele
post Oct 13 2006, 03:06 PM
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Very nice drawing Thorsten! Mind if I pass this along to our local Titan group?

The RADAR team is interpreting variations within the lakes to indicate that they are sensing the lake bottoms in some places. This would indicate that these lakes are quite shallow, maybe on the order of a few 10s of meters.


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ngunn
post Oct 13 2006, 03:08 PM
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Yes I've been keeping up with the posts on this, and it's still far from obvious to me at what point on the images you actually get your feet wet.
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volcanopele
post Oct 13 2006, 03:31 PM
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Here are the outlines of the lakes PIA01942

Attached Image


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MahFL
post Oct 13 2006, 05:57 PM
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Are they 100 % certain they actually have wet lakes, or just dry lake beds ?
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volcanopele
post Oct 13 2006, 06:16 PM
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No they are not 100% certain. We know that the lake beds contain a radar absorbing material, which have some sort of internal structure. Now that doesn't conclusively mean shallow, liquid methane, but given the morphology and associated structures, this appears to be the most reasonable hypothesis.


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ngunn
post Oct 13 2006, 10:18 PM
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Thanks for the lake bounday map and other interesting comments. I agree that the image suggests two different types of surface with a boundary more or less as drawn. I particularly like the 'river estuary' but I'm not so sure about the two isolated lake patches on the right. However there is a heck of a lot of detail within the 'lake' including continuations of apparent drainage features. Doesn't look deep enough to sail a boat to me.

I agree that lakes are plausible, even likely, and that they could look like this, but I have a nagging doubt that the same appearance could be produced in other ways. I just want the case nailed down - solid evidence of liquid, so to speak, and I think we're still waiting (not what you'd guess from the press releases).
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Guest_Sunspot_*
post Oct 13 2006, 11:09 PM
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QUOTE (ngunn @ Oct 13 2006, 11:18 PM) *
I agree that lakes are plausible, even likely, and that they could look like this, but I have a nagging doubt that the same appearance could be produced in other ways.


Such As?

You cant possibly think that the features in this image could be formed by anything other than a moving liquid?

http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/jpegMod/PIA01942_modest.jpg
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antipode
post Oct 13 2006, 11:37 PM
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Note the 'groove' that is the radar dark continuation of the major north south drainage channel well into what appears to the the lake proper? this feature reminds me of the Warburton and Kalaweerina 'grooves' that are obvious on isobaths on the map of Lake Eyre, Australia's largest lake. The lake is normally largely dry, but after big rains it can fill mainly through the aforementioned rivers, which have caut 'grooves' into the lakebed. Even when the surrounding lakebed is dry, the grooves can hold water.

I've include a low res map, north at the bottom. The grooves are clear at the bottom of the map as major deflections in the isobaths. The lake is around 150km north to south.

It looks to me like that lake (on Titan!) might be substantially larger when fully flooded.

P
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ngunn
post Oct 14 2006, 01:50 PM
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QUOTE (Sunspot @ Oct 14 2006, 12:09 AM) *
You cant possibly think that the features in this image could be formed by anything other than a moving liquid?


Indeed not, it obviously was formed that way. I think evidence for moving liquid is overwhelming at the Huygens landing site too. The question is when? Now? Last week? Last year? A hundred (or a million) years ago? It's entirely possible that we are looking at real rippling lakes and actively flowing streams. If it turns out to be so no-one will be happier than me - but that is exactly the problem. The history of astronomy is littered with discredited theories born of wishful thinking, especially in the matter of liquids. So until it's nailed I'll continue to play devil's advocate.
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Thorsten
post Oct 15 2006, 08:52 AM
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QUOTE (ugordan @ Oct 13 2006, 02:16 PM) *
Isn't he also Chinese? wink.gif


Just a little joke! As CBS informed us in June that Chinese astronauts will land on Dione in 2024, I thought they might as well do a stopover on Titan! I would have liked to add a NASA Titan-Montgolfiere but the Chinese will obviously be faster!

http://www.unmannedspaceflight.com/index.p...1216&st=330
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Thorsten
post Oct 15 2006, 08:56 AM
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QUOTE (volcanopele @ Oct 13 2006, 05:06 PM) *
Mind if I pass this along to our local Titan group?


I would be honored, volcanopele! (Sorry for the late reply)!

Below are two drawings, inspired by the radar image “Titans Great Lakes (PIA01942)”. The one to the left deals with the idea that the long dark channel at the left of PIA01942 is surrounded by extensive flood plains. The second one shows the bright landforms at the top protruding into the “lake” that could be the eroded hilltops of flooded landforms. (As the speech balloons indicate I am working in my free time on a little comic strip in which Titan plays a small but significant role.)
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mchan
post Oct 15 2006, 09:34 PM
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QUOTE (ugordan @ Oct 13 2006, 05:16 AM) *
Isn't he also Chinese? wink.gif

I think he or she is Titanese. At lease that is what the Chinese characters say. smile.gif
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Gsnorgathon
post Oct 16 2006, 02:52 AM
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So - can those in the know point those of us who are in the don't-know to discussions of how far Cassini's radar penetrates various hypothetical Titanese fluids? I know that any such discussion is fraught with uncertainty, but I'd like to get an idea, at least, as to how much uncertainty there is about just how deep we might be seeing below the surface of these lakes.
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volcanopele
post Oct 16 2006, 03:04 AM
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IIRC, it's on the order of 25-50 meters in liquid methane.


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ugordan
post Oct 16 2006, 07:12 AM
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Of course, that would probably assume pure liquid methane. Any contaminants will probably reduce the figure. It's not totally unreasonable to assume a lot of organic stuff is dissolved/dispersed in the lakes.


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tty
post Oct 16 2006, 06:25 PM
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I wonder if most organics would really have that much effect on radar penetration. What would really stop radar is ionic compounds that make the liquid electrically conducting.

tty
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ugordan
post Oct 16 2006, 06:43 PM
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True, but what about fine, dusty particles mixed in the lakes? Not dissolved but solid particles? There would have to be a major concentration of those dispersed in the methane to affect radar, but it's a thought...


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peter59
post Oct 9 2007, 06:30 PM
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See more, enjoy more !!!

Swath T19


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and Targeted Distant Look (T19)


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Free software for planetary science (including Cassini Image Viewer).
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peter59
post Oct 10 2007, 04:32 AM
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and T20 Targeted Distant Look (NW Xanadu, Tortola Facula)
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Juramike
post Oct 10 2007, 04:42 AM
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QUOTE (peter59 @ Oct 9 2007, 02:30 PM) *
See more, enjoy more !!!

Swath T19


Attached Image


and Targeted Distant Look (T19)


Attached Image


Very cool!

Any idea of the coordinates of the distant targeted look?

-Mike


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peter59
post Oct 10 2007, 07:05 PM
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I can't open radar images greather than 100 MB (256 pixels/deg). Volcanopele,
can you update your Titan RADAR SAR Swaths page ?


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volcanopele
post Oct 10 2007, 08:59 PM
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Sure, but it will have to wait until I get back to Tucson this coming weekend.


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