My Assistant
April 2010 CHARM, the moon that would be a planet |
Apr 28 2010, 09:15 AM
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#1
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Senior Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 3516 Joined: 4-November 05 From: North Wales Member No.: 542 |
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Apr 28 2010, 10:39 AM
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#2
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Senior Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 3516 Joined: 4-November 05 From: North Wales Member No.: 542 |
According to this presentation the evidence for non-synchronous rotation has now gone away. How does that square with the SAR image mis-ties of tens of kilometres reported earlier?
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Apr 28 2010, 08:52 PM
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#3
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![]() Member ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 131 Joined: 30-August 06 From: Moscow, Idaho Member No.: 1086 |
According to this presentation the evidence for non-synchronous rotation has now gone away. How does that square with the SAR image mis-ties of tens of kilometres reported earlier? The 10s of km misregistration is due to the pole being offset from the orbit pole -- i.e. a 0.3 degree obliquity for Titan. That's still there, and accounts for the vast majority of the offset. The simultaneous spin-up and precession that nearly cancelled to explain the remaining ~1km offsets is what is apparently gone. I never bought into that in the first place - Jason |
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May 1 2010, 01:52 PM
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#4
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![]() Member ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 614 Joined: 23-February 07 From: Occasionally in Columbia, MD Member No.: 1764 |
Right, in the initial solution, most of the misregistration was accounted for by the obliquity. The best solutions
also required nonsynchroneity, although the correlation in solution space between dRA/dt of the pole (i.e. precession) and delta-omega (nonsynroneity) was high. When Bryan Stiles developed these solutions (published in AJ), I had to tell the nonsynchronous/wind/ocean story (in Science) - if I didnt interpret the nonynch that way, someone else would have.... With new data, and a bug fixed in the fitting code, the solutions have a lower (but still non-zero) delta-omega. An independent solution by the Italian group now (once an East-West snafu in longitudes of tiepoints was resolved) gets the same answer. The obliquity remains (and itself points to a liquid interior). (Jason was evidently right to be wary of the dRA/dt correlation; we made the best interpretation of what we had at the time - all anyone can do in a competitive environment. And even if wrong [as a lot of stuff in Science and Nature turns out to be] the paper stimulated a lot of work on GCMs, gravitational and pressure coupling between core and crust, etc...... it's been rather fun to watch :-) The dRA/dt, incidentally, is interestingly high.... but that's another story) The 10s of km misregistration is due to the pole being offset from the orbit pole -- i.e. a 0.3 degree obliquity for Titan. That's still there, and accounts for the vast majority of the offset. The simultaneous spin-up and precession that nearly cancelled to explain the remaining ~1km offsets is what is apparently gone. I never bought into that in the first place |
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May 1 2010, 08:18 PM
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#5
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Senior Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 3516 Joined: 4-November 05 From: North Wales Member No.: 542 |
The dRA/dt, incidentally, is interestingly high.... but that's another story) Does this suggest that the precession, and maybe even the obliquity itself, are not shared by Titan's deep interior but are rather properties of the floating crust alone? It's a fascinating subject: thinking about it raises so many complex questions and possibilities it's hardly surprising if initial interpretations require reappraisal as the story unfolds. Another great reason for staying here a further seven years. |
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ngunn April 2010 CHARM Apr 28 2010, 09:15 AM
ngunn QUOTE (Jason W Barnes @ Apr 28 2010, 09:5... Apr 28 2010, 09:31 PM
Vultur Unless I'm missing something, that presentatio... Apr 28 2010, 09:01 PM
nprev Seepage would explain methane's continuing pre... Apr 28 2010, 09:49 PM![]() ![]() |
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