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Clouds in the Tropics of Titan Emily Schaller Lunar and Planetary Laboratory, University of Arizona 2010 Hubble Fellows Symposium Titan • Thick atmosphere with surface pressure ~1.5 bar. • Major gases in atmosphere: N2,(~98%) CH4 (~2%) • 27 degree obliquity • 16 day rotation period Phase diagram of water T E http://www.lsbu.ac.uk/water/phase.html Phase diagram of methane Liquid Solid T Gas Credit: H. Roe Adaptive optics at Keck 10-m Gemini 8-m Typical Titan images: 2001- 2005 Schaller et al. 2006 Mean daily insolation on Titan Models of Titan Cloud Activity with season Present Mitchell et al. 2006 PNAS Present Rannou et al. 2006 Science Latitude Cassini ISS Surface Map 0 x West Longitude Credit: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute Dry Tropics (dunes) – cloud-free Wet poles (lakes, rivers, other fluvial features) – lots of clouds Images from: saturn.jpl.nasa.gov & Radebaugh et al. 2008, But… small-scale surface features seen by Huygens probe near equator show evidence for rainfall http://www.esa.int/SPECIALS/Cassini-Huygens/index.html IRTF spectroscopic monitoring • Disk integrated spectra of Titan covering 0.8-2.4 microns with a resolution of 375 • Data taken every night SpeX instrument is on the telescope • Disk integrated spectra: – total fractional cloud coverage – cloud altitudes – Interrupt at Gemini to determine latitudes IRTF Spectral Data Relative Flux surface troposphere stratosphere 15% 2.03 micron flux IRTF 0 -15% ISS Surface Map Schaller et al. 2010 submitted Relative Flux Flux IRTF Spectral Data Spectra deviate Spectra deviate at <2.12 microns at <2.12 microns indicating extremely indicating extremely low <0.15% tropospheric low <0.15% tropospheric cloud activity in 90% of cloud activity in 95% of all nights all nights Typical Titan images: 2001- 2005 Schaller et al. 2006 Titan Images: 2005-2008 IRTF Spectrum Schaller et al. Nature 2009 Cassini Titan flybys (March 31, May 20) completely missed event Schaller et al. Nature 2009 Tropical Clouds • • • Two days after initial large tropical cloud, clouds also appeared near the south pole Simple calculations reveal that a Rossby (planetary) wave would take ~2 earth days to reach the south pole Rossby waves trigger clouds by forming areas of low pressure Schaller et al. Nature 2009 Tropical Clouds - tie to the surface? • 15S, 250W contains a small cloud in in all images for 20 days. • Surface heating/methane injection at this location? • Great place for Cassini to look for potential cryovolcanism or surface changes due to methane rainout Schaller et al. Nature 2009 Conclusions • Locations and intensities of Titan’s clouds vary significantly with season • Tropical clouds do occasionally form on Titan • Clouds can form via teleconnections mediated by large-scale waves • Large cloud events may be caused by increased methane humidity, surface heating, or other factors • Observations of Titan’s clouds over the next few years by Cassini and groundbased observations will provide the key for interpreting the origin and evolution of the fluvial surface features.