Earth isn't the only world in the solar system with active lakes,Mike Horner Archives rivers, and oceans.
About 880 million miles away in space, Saturn's largest moonTitan is also flush with surface liquid that evaporates, forms clouds in its hazy atmosphere, and rains. Despite this seemingly similar hydrology, the two planetary bodies couldn't be more different: Titan's oceans are made of methane and ethane — not water. Though people tend to think of those chemicals as gasses, they act like liquids on this super-cold moon, like gasolineon Earth.
Despite NASA's Cassini spacecraft mapping more than 620,000 square miles of lakes and oceans on Titanbefore the end of its mission in 2017, much of how these alien seas behave remains a mystery. But a new studypublished in Science Advancessuggests that these liquids may indeed ripple, surge, and swell against Titan's shorelines, just as water does on Earth.
Whether Titan's oceans are still or have waves has been debated for more than 15 years, said Rose Palermo, a geologist and lead author of the study.
"Some people who tried to see evidence for waves didn't see any, and said, 'These seas are mirror-smooth,'" Palermo said in a statement. "Others said they did see some roughness on the liquid surface but weren't sure if waves caused it."
Using computer models to simulate different erosion mechanisms that occur on Earth, a team mostly composed of MIT geologists found that waves were the likely source of erosion to have formed the coastal shapes seen in Cassini's radar images.
If Titan's oceans exhibit waves, that could give scientists insight into the moon's climate. They could then begin predicting the strength of wind on this world and infer what direction it's often blowing — factors that might be necessary to power such waves.
"If we could stand at the edge of one of Titan's seas," said coauthor Taylor Perron, in a statement, "we might see waves of liquid methane and ethane lapping on the shore and crashing on the coasts during storms."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
In order to prove beyond a shadow of doubt that Titan's liquids are moving in waves, scientists will eventually need direct views of this activity. That may be possible in the next decade, when NASA's Dragonfly, a helicopter-like robotic spacecraft, arrives at the moon for exploration in 2034. The $3.35 billion mission is slated to launch in 2028.
NASA has made the mission a priority because Titan's icy dunes appear to have the organic ingredients for life— the kinds that we know about, at least — to potentially emerge.
The entire US election was basically one giant Photoshop battleNearly half of Americans didn't vote — not even for HarambeDonald Trump has just updated his Twitter bioTrump once said the very thing that elected him was a 'disaster for democracy'George R.R. Martin on Donald Trump win: 'Winter is coming'Nicolas Cage knows you're mocking him online, but he doesn't careThe Chinese city that makes the world's flags knew Trump would winNearly half of Americans didn't vote — not even for HarambeHow the 'L.A. Times' poll was the only one to predict a Trump win14 blankets to crawl under and just kinda waitEveryone is hugging each other after Trump's win13 spectacularly Scottish reactions to Donald Trump becoming presidentThis letter proves the Nixons saw Trump's victory comingDonald Trump has just updated his Twitter bioAustralia's newspapers aren't holding back on hot Trump takesOn top of everything, Snapchat went downNot my president: Powerful images show anti14 blankets to crawl under and just kinda waitWhatsApp catches up to Facebook's other chat apps with GIF supportLet this NBA mascot strip Sorry, Zuck. 'Fortnite' has been the 'real' metaverse all along. Trump blatantly lies about being in the White House, confuses everyone A photo of an egg beat Kylie Jenner as the most Lady Gaga's interview is the meme for denying everything from your past The 'Killing Eve' moment at the Golden Globes that you may have missed Etsy sellers are officially launching a guild to protect merchants 8 organizations working to solve the gender gap in education — and how to help them Twitter is redesigning Spaces and adding podcast suggestions Mink Makeup Printer fuses 3D printing and beauty 'Star Trek: Lower Decks' Season 3 review: Not just for Trekkies The 'and it shows' meme is getting weirder by the day 20 TikTok accounts that will fill the void Vine left in your heart Yumi baby food subscription aims to disrupt a parenting industry A story of an online stalker takes a bizarre turn down the rabbit hole That Dwayne Johnson interview where he bashed PC culture was fake This flaming cocktail belongs in 'Harry Potter' Uber safety update puts users with non J.K. Rowling's first tweet of 2019 contains an optical illusion and a very good dog Sex toy debacle reveals shameful double standard at CES What's what in Middle
2.226s , 10130.171875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Mike Horner Archives】,Feast Information Network