This is surely some form of berg that has broken free and then
traveled to the witnessed location. Any other explanation must
entail tide at least and that appears ruled out.
It is a pleasant surprise that will encourage a real visit perhaps
sooner than anticipated.
It is certainly unexpected.
Mystery object in
lake on Saturn's moon Titan intrigues scientists
Nasa's Cassini probe
took image last year as it passed by planet's largest moon –
nothing seen when other images taken
The mystery object,
described as a 'magic island' appeared out of nowhere in radar images
of a hydrocarbon sea on Saturn's giant moon, Titan. Photograph:
JPL-Caltech/ASI/Cornell/NASA/PA
Ian Sample, science
editor
22 June 2014
Scientists are
investigating a mystery object that appeared and then vanished again
from a giant lake on Titan, the largest moon of Saturn.
They spotted the
object in an image taken by Nasa's Cassini probe last year as it
swung around the alien moon, more than a billion kilometres from
Earth. Pictures of the same spot captured nothing before or some days
later.
Little more than a
white blob on a grainy image of Titan's northern hemisphere, the
sighting could be an iceberg that broke free of the shoreline, an
effect of rising bubbles, or waves rolling across the normally placid
lake's surface, scientists say.
Astronomers have named
the blob the "magic island" until they have a better idea
what they are looking at. "We can't be sure what it is yet
because we only have the one image, but it's not something you would
normally see on Titan," said Jason Hofgartner, a planetary
scientist at Cornell University in New York. "It is not
something that has been there permanently."
Titan is one of the
most extraordinary places in the solar system. The land is strewn
with hydrocarbon dunes that rise above lakes fed by rivers of liquid
methane and ethane. The atmosphere is so thick, and the gravity so
weak, that a human could strap on wings and flap into the air.
That air is laced with lethal hydrogen cyanide.
The largest moon of
Saturn – there are more than 60 smaller ones – is the only place
beyond Earth known to have stable liquids on its surface and rain
falling from its skies. Spacecraft have mapped scores of lakes there.
The three biggest are named after mythological beasts, the Kraken,
Ligeia and Punga, and are large enough to qualify as seas, or mares.
The US team made their
curious discovery while poring over radar images of Ligeia mare, a
150-metre-deep sea that stretches for hundreds of kilometres in
Titan's northern hemisphere. Among the snapshots taken in 2007, 2009
and 2013 was one with the strange white feature, about six miles off
the mountainous southern shore.
NASA handout
photo dated 26/04/07 of the area in Titan's Ligeia mare before the
object was seen (top) and 10/07/13 of the 'magic island'. Photograph:
JPL-Caltech/ASI/Cornell/NASA/PA Roughly 12 miles long and six
miles wide, the bright spot appears in an image dated 10 July 2013
but is missing from pictures of the same spot taken previously and on
26 July. Hofgartner said the team had ruled out any errors in the
radar imaging equipment that could result in the blob.
Through a process of
elimination, the scientists have whittled the number of potential
explanations down to four. It could be one or more icebergs floating
around, or material in suspension beneath the surface. But Cassini's
radar might also have picked up a rush of bubbles coming from the
depths of the sea, or captured the first signs of deep-sea waves on
Titan.
Last year's Cassini
fly-by found that Ligeia mare, Titan's second-largest lake, was as
smooth as glass. The tranquil expanse of liquid methane and ethane
had no waves or surface ripples larger than 1mm.
The profound stillness
may be because the wind on Titan is so feeble. But that could be
changing. Titan's orbital path and tilted axis make for seasons that
last for seven Earth years. The northern hemisphere is gently warming
now, as spring gives way to summer, which arrives in earnest in 2017.
Warmer weather brings stronger winds, and stronger winds bring waves.
"This may be
waves picking up. The sun is shining brighter, and that energy can be
powering the winds. All you would need is a light breeze, around half
a metre per second," said Hofgartner, whose study appeared in
the journal Nature Geoscience.
But the wind on Titan
may never be strong enough to stir truly impressive waves. "If
you had a large enough surfboard, you could certainly float there,
but I don't think you'd really get the waves you'd want,"
Hofgartner said. The hydrocarbon seas, he added, are a chilly -180C.
If waves are the cause
of the curious white blob, then Cassini spotted them before they had
spread more widely across the sea. Follow-up images in the next few
months are expected to shed more light on the mystery.
"We now have the
first tantalising glimpse of some sort of dynamical process in one of
Titan's largest seas," said John Zarnecki, professor of space
science at the Open University.
"The observations
with Cassini's radar are close to the limit of sensitivity so hard to
interpret. But they do seem to be the first sign of something going
on in the sea. Is it floating solids or erupting gas bubbles from
below or wave action? We just don't know.
The one thing we can
say with certainty is that we just have to go back to Titan – but
this time with a sea floater so that we can see close up just what is
happening in the seas of this incredible place."
In March, some of the
researchers who worked with Hofgartner reported what may have been
glimpses of tiny waves on another Titan sea, called Punga mare.
Instruments aboard Cassini found that sunlight reflecting off the sea
was brighter than expected in places, an effect that could be caused
by waves lapping at the shore.
Nasa has toyed with
the idea of sending a boat to sail on the seas of Titan, but the
proposal lost out to a mission to Mars. There are still hopes of
exploring the moon with two other Nasa missions. One would fly a
balloon on Titan and release a drone to map the surface. The
other aims to drop a submarine into the largest of Titan's
seas, the 300-metre-deep Kraken mare.
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